I r a n i n Wo r l d H i s t o r y
104
traveling to and from Persepolis could not fail to notice the grinding
poverty of the villages along the way.
Radicalism, so widespread in the 1960s, also found expression in
Iran, not only among the intelligentsia but in the arts as well. A num-
ber of young filmmakers, many of them influenced by French New
Wave directors such as Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut, broke
the commercial mold of popular violence-and-betrayal type movies
(derisively called
film farsi
) and explored more avant-garde forms of
cinema. A prime example is Dariush Mehrjui’s surrealistic film
The
Cow
(1969), in which a destitute farmer is
so distraught by the death
of his cow that he takes on the role of a cow himself.
In the field of literature, Iranian poets and novelists continued to
explore new styles. Ahmad Shamlu drew inspiration from both clas-
sical poets and modernists such as Nima Yushij, as well as from French
literature and even Japanese haiku. Sohrab Sepehri explored Buddhist
culture and was also an accomplished painter. The novelist Hushang
Golshiri was known for his dense prose and subtle allegory; Iran’s
most prestigious literary award is named for him.
Forugh Farrokhzad was the first Iranian poet to express herself as
an independent, sexual woman:
Desire surged in his eyes
red wine swirled in the cup
my
body surfed all over his
in the softness of the downy bed.
6
Her work drew controversy, and after spending a number of years
living unapologetically as the mistress of filmmaker Ebrahim Golestan,
Farrokhzad died at the age of thirty-two in a suspicious car accident.
“Forugh,” as she is affectionately called by her many admirers, remains
an iconic figure for Iranian feminists. Another highly respected woman
poet, Simin Behbahani, also won international acclaim, being twice
nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Shah Mohammad Reza’s first two marriages failed to produce
an heir, but his third wife, Farah Diba,
bore a son, Reza, in October
1960, a mere ten months after wedding the shah. When her royal hus-
band decided to hold a lavish coronation ceremony for himself in 1967
(twenty-six years into his reign), taking the grandiose title “Light of the
Aryans,” he added to the occasion by crowning Farah as empress. In
the years that followed, Farah was given wide-ranging responsibilities,
not only in government but also as head of numerous humanitarian and
artistic enterprises.
M o d e r n i z a t i o n a n d D ic t a t o r s h i p
105
Farah’s work in health and education projects took her to cities and
villages all over Iran, giving her a better sense of the country’s realities
than that possessed by the shah. The public did not fail to notice the
difference, and the empress was arguably
much more popular than the
shah himself. Her involvement in the arts, meanwhile, which included
purchasing many works by well-known artists from all over the world,
made her a known and respected figure on the international art scene.
Her chief artistic advisor was the painter Aydin Aghdashlu—himself a
master of Renaissance, classical Persian, and magical realist styles—who
acquired works by Monet, Picasso, Warhol, and other Western artists
on behalf of the empress.
In 1973 an event occurred that dramatically altered Iran’s economy.
As a protest against Western support for Israel in the Yom Kippur War
against Egypt and Syria, the oil cartel known
as the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)—which was under the shah’s
leadership at the time—declared an embargo on oil sales to the West.
The price of oil increased fourfold almost overnight. This produced a
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last shah of Iran, with his wife Farah Diba at
Andrews Air Force Base during a trip to the United States in November 1977.
The shah, a staunch US ally who attempted to modernize Iran even as he
struggled to maintain absolutist control, was toppled by a popular revolution in
1979, bringing an end to two thousand five hundred years of Iranian monarchy.
US Air Force MSgt. Denham / Department of Defense Visual Information Center
I r a n i n Wo r l d H i s t o r y
106
severe economic crisis in countries such as the United States that had
grown dependent on cheap oil and created a
windfall for oil-producing
countries like Iran.
Iran’s massive oil wealth made possible advances in the fields
of industry, education, and public health. Women and religious
minorities—including Baha’is, Jews, and Christians who had early on
embraced Western forms of education—saw increased access to educa-
tion and jobs. Ultimately, however, the surge in riches benefited mainly
the elite urban classes, especially those with connections to the royal
family.
Ordinary consumers, meanwhile, were hit hard by unchecked
inflation. The bazaars were flooded with foreign goods, at prices
domestic producers could not compete with. Iranian farmers in par-
ticular were devastated by cheap imports of food staples such as wheat.
Nor were these social and economic changes accompanied by
increased political freedoms. As growing numbers of people entered
the educated classes and became more politically aware, rising expec-
tations for greater public participation in governance could not be met
within Iran’s totalitarian system. Two officially sanctioned political
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