Reading Lolita in Tehran

a memoir in books

356 pages

English language

Published Feb. 17, 2004 by Random House.

ISBN:
978-0-8129-7106-4
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OCLC Number:
54030894

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4 stars (1 review)

Prof. Nafisi resigned from her job as professor of English Literature at a university in Tehran in 1995 due to repressive government policies. For the next 2 years, until she left Iran, she gathered 7 young women, former students, at her house every Thursday morning to read and discuss works of Western literature forbidden by the new regime. They used this forum to learn to speak freely, not only about literature, but also about the social, political, and cultural realities of living under strict Islamic rule.

14 editions

A book about books

4 stars

I was attracted to Reading Lolita In Tehran by its promise of revealing life within Iran and also by the Margaret Atwood quote on the front of 'A book lover's tale'. Published as memoir, Nafisi does state right at the start that she had to change names and events in order to protect those remaining in Iran therefore it is hard to tell how much is actually true and how much flavoured by truth but essentially fiction. What is overwhelmingly apparent throughout is Nafisi's obsessive love for the greats of Western fiction and the energy she devotes to spreading this love as far as she can. Always a teacher, I did feel hectored by her tone at certain points in the book and there are frequent swings off into pure literary criticism. I wasn't expecting so much of a book about books so it took me a while to adjust …

Subjects

  • Nafisi, Azar
  • English teachers -- Iran -- Biography
  • English literature -- Study and teaching -- Iran
  • American literature -- Study and teaching -- Iran
  • Women -- Books and reading -- Iran
  • Group reading -- Iran