
Tied Up in Tehran
Women, Social Change, and the Politics of Daily Life in Postrevolutionary Iran
Norma Claire Moruzzi(Author)
Cambridge University Press
Published on 16. October 2025
Book
Paperback/Softback
376 pages
978-1-009-54026-1 (ISBN)
Description
Tied Up in Tehran offers a richly interdisciplinary study of ordinary life in Iran since the 1979 revolution and a critical intervention in political theory debates on knowledge and method. Drawing from over ten years of field work in Iran since the 1990s, and originating in the author's surreal experience of being served tangerines during a home invasion in Tehran, Norma Claire Moruzzi examines the experiences of women, young people, artists, and activists: at home, at work, and in the street. These stories - of food and family, film and politics, shopping and crime-reckon with the past, demonstrate resilient democratization in the present, and provide glimpses of a plausible future while offering a refreshing model to ethically engaged modes of study. Moruzzi's lucid and engaging writing explores Iranian daily life as unexpected, contradictory, and full of political promise.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
Worked examples or Exercises
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
541 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-009-54026-1 (9781009540261)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
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Additional editions

Norma Claire Moruzzi
Tied Up in Tehran
Women, Social Change, and the Politics of Daily Life in Postrevolutionary Iran
Book
10/2025
Cambridge University Press
€122.20
Shipment within 15-20 days
Person
Norma Claire Moruzzi is Associate Professor of Gender and Women's Studies and Political Science at the University of Illinois, Chicago. She is also a member and past chair of the editorial committee of the journal Middle East Report. Her first book, Speaking through the Mask: Hannah Arendt and the Politics of Social Identity (Cornell University Press: 2000) won the 2002 Gradiva Book Award.
Content
Preface: how to read this book; 1. Introduction: the personal is political: how I came to write this book; 2. Tied up in Tehran: a metaphor; 3. How our mothers drive us crazy: hospitality, ritual and the burden of the social; 4. Food as a social relation: Sabzi and the question of household skilled labor; 5. Elegy or the rule of the fathers/the break with the past; 6. Democratic intimacies: jokes, sex, and ta'arof; 7. Through the looking glass: reflexive cinema and society in post-revolutionary Iran; 8. Women, life, freedom: one movement out of two legacies; 9. Being a public woman: streets, cars, crimes, and the shifting calculus of moral accountability; 10. Shopping for shoes: consumer identity, commodity fetishism, and gender as a brand; 11. We are more than one, when we speak together: collective art, plural possibilities, and the horizon of utopia; 12. Coda: thinking in practice: Arendt, Foucault, and the challenge of freedom.