TY - BOOK AU - Nikpour,Golnar TI - The incarcerated modern: prisons and public life in Iran T2 - Stanford studies in Middle Eastern and Islamic societies and cultures SN - 9781503637634 AV - HV9785.2 .N56 2024 PY - 2024/// CY - Stanford, California PB - Stanford University Press KW - Prisons KW - Iran KW - History KW - Political aspects KW - Punishment N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Lawlessness and order : the Qajar roots of modern prisons in Iran -- The criminal is the patient, the prison will be the cure : building the carceral imagination in Pahlavi Iran -- Like a fertile storm : prisons and revolutionary worldmaking in the Iranian guerrilla era -- The Iranian prison goes global : Iranian revolutionaries and the international human rights movement -- Making an example : carceral utopianism and prison expansion in revolutionary Iran -- Carcerality beyond prisons? : the politics of punishment in the contemporary Islamic Republic N2 - "Iran's prison system is a foundational institution of Iranian political modernity. The Incarcerated Modern traces the transformation of Iran from a decentralized empire with few imprisoned persons at the turn of the twentieth century into a modern nation-state with over a quarter million prisoners today. In policing the line between "bad criminal" and "good citizen," the carceral system has shaped and reshaped Iranian understandings of citizenship, freedom, and political belonging. Golnar Nikpour explores the interplay between the concrete space of the Iranian prison and the role of prisons in producing new public cultures and political languages in Iran. From prison writings of 1920s leftist prisoners and communiqués of 1950s militant Islamists, to paintings of 1970s revolutionary guerrillas and mapping projects organized by contemporary dissident prisoners, carceral confinement has shaped modern Iranian political movements. Today, mass incarceration is a global phenomenon. The Incarcerated Modern connects Iranian history to transnational carceral histories to illuminate the shared architectures, economies, and techniques of modern punishment"-- ER -