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Explores how writers, filmmakers and artists have attempted to
reckon with the legacy of a devastating war The Iran-Iraq War was
the longest conventional war of the 20th century. The memory of it
may have faded in the wake of more recent wars in the region, but
the harrowing facts remain: over one million soldiers and civilians
dead, millions more permanently displaced and disabled, and an
entire generation marked by prosthetic implants and teenage
martyrdom. These same facts have been instrumentalized by agendas
both foreign and domestic, but also aestheticized, defamiliarized,
readdressed and reconciled by artists, writers, and filmmakers
across an array of identities: linguistic (Arabic, Persian,
Kurdish), religious (Shiite, Sunni, atheist), and political
(Iranian, Iraqi, internationalist). Official discourses have
unsurprisingly tried to dominate the process of production and
distribution of war narratives. In doing so, they have ignored and
silenced other voices. Centering on novels, films, memoirs, and
poster art that gave aesthetic expression to the Iran-Iraq War, the
essays gathered in this volume present multiple perspectives on the
war's most complex and underrepresented narratives. These scholars
do not naively claim to represent an authenticity lacking in
official discourses of the war, but rather, they call into question
the notion of authenticity itself. Finding, deciding upon, and
creating a language that can convey any sort of truth at
all-collective, national, or private-is the major preoccupation of
the texts and critiques in this diverse collection.
Explores how writers, filmmakers and artists have attempted to
reckon with the legacy of a devastating war The Iran-Iraq War was
the longest conventional war of the 20th century. The memory of it
may have faded in the wake of more recent wars in the region, but
the harrowing facts remain: over one million soldiers and civilians
dead, millions more permanently displaced and disabled, and an
entire generation marked by prosthetic implants and teenage
martyrdom. These same facts have been instrumentalized by agendas
both foreign and domestic, but also aestheticized, defamiliarized,
readdressed and reconciled by artists, writers, and filmmakers
across an array of identities: linguistic (Arabic, Persian,
Kurdish), religious (Shiite, Sunni, atheist), and political
(Iranian, Iraqi, internationalist). Official discourses have
unsurprisingly tried to dominate the process of production and
distribution of war narratives. In doing so, they have ignored and
silenced other voices. Centering on novels, films, memoirs, and
poster art that gave aesthetic expression to the Iran-Iraq War, the
essays gathered in this volume present multiple perspectives on the
war's most complex and underrepresented narratives. These scholars
do not naively claim to represent an authenticity lacking in
official discourses of the war, but rather, they call into question
the notion of authenticity itself. Finding, deciding upon, and
creating a language that can convey any sort of truth at
all-collective, national, or private-is the major preoccupation of
the texts and critiques in this diverse collection.
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