Conformity and Resistance in Mahabad
Media Consumption, Conformity and Resistance:
A Visual Ethnography of Youth in Iranian Kurdistan
Kameel Ahmady
ISBN: 978-1-914165-23-8
First Published Spring 2021
86 Pages
Conformity and Resistance in Mahabad
The initial aim of this research was to examine the factors which shape a sense of belonging and place among young people in Mahabad, a town on the north-west periphery of Iran. I wanted to look at their consumption of local, national and transnational forms of media, and how this influenced their view of events, their local environment, and the ways they chose to narrate these. Reflexive visual methods was used by asking them to take their own photographic pieces dealing with themes they saw as relevant to local current events and their place within these processes.
The work produced by the young people shows the multiple and sometimes competing forces at work in the lives of young people in Iran and Kurdistan, where idealised images about ‘the west’ can serve to challenge or reinforce their own sense of place. Conventions of media and popular culture ‘story telling’ - that is the discourses used to describe current affairs and social conditions in satellite television from Asia and Europe, films, print media such as newspapers, as well as vernacular trends – have shaped not only the choice of themes which are given priority by young people, but also the ways in which they view these themes and the relevance to their lives. Particularly with respect to issues of gender, there appears to be a strong desire for more public debate, but an ambivalence about the role of hybrid influences as positive or negative. Additionally, local forms of identity based on Kurdish resistance to a dominant nationalism are sometimes discernable, as is the overarching context of recent global events drawing Iran into direct political confrontations with western powers.