Abstract :
The early twentieth-century nationalist discourse in Iran reviled,
on the one hand, a Qajar hegemony on account of an exhausted
“manifest destiny,” and lauded, on the other, a discourse of
masculinity that assumed moral responsibility to protect the
imaginary “geobody” of Iran. In this paper I examine how this
discourse of patriotism resonates through Mehdi Akhavan-Sales’s
poem “This Autumn in Prison” (1966) and Esmail Fassih’s novel
The Story of Javid (1981). With a comparative—and conducive—
focus on Akhavan-Sales’s poetic figure Mazdusht at the outset of
analysis, before turning primarily to Fassih’s protagonist Javid, I
argue that the construction of an archetypal form of gender, or
what I term an “original Iranian manhood,” is integral to both
men of letters as they have channeled their nationalist concerns
through literary expression. As I proceed with The Story of Javid,
I propose that gender—nationally reimagined—shapes a quest
narrative set, quite symbolically, during the historic decade of
1920s when the politically bankrupt Qajar rulers were giving way
to the iron fists of a Pahlavi state apparatus, with fateful
repercussions for Javid’s performance of masculinity—
particularly with regard to the novel’s treatment of female
characters.
Keywords :
Esmail Fassih , Mehdi Akhavan-Sales , Iranian nationalist discourse , men and masculinities in Iran , gender archetype