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Coffeehouses (re)appropriated: counterpublics and cultural resistance in Tabriz, Iran
[journal article]
Abstract Over the last decade, traditional coffeehouses have attracted increasing interest in the city of Tabriz, Iran, in the context of consistent state monitoring and restriction of public life - particularly so among non-Persian ethnolinguistic populations. Relying on a combination of ethnographic method... view more
Over the last decade, traditional coffeehouses have attracted increasing interest in the city of Tabriz, Iran, in the context of consistent state monitoring and restriction of public life - particularly so among non-Persian ethnolinguistic populations. Relying on a combination of ethnographic methods (observations, interviews, and visual documentation), this article explores the everyday life of two coffeehouses in Tabriz through a theoretical lens of third place, counterpublics, and everyday ethics of resistance. Coffeehouses are currently retaining functions as third places; cross-generational venues for preserving cultural, artistic, and linguistic identity as well as institutions of social defiance, resting on elaborate ethical codes and tacit social agreements. Through mechanisms of everyday ethics and cultural practices re-connecting to local history, cultural creativity, and language, insiders are distinguished from outsiders, serving to build trust, security, and solidarity in the context of Iranian state monitoring and restricted social space.... view less
Keywords
Iran; culture; resistance; everyday life; ethics
Classification
Area Development Planning, Regional Research
Cultural Sociology, Sociology of Art, Sociology of Literature
Free Keywords
coffeehouses; counterpublics; third place
Document language
English
Publication Year
2020
Page/Pages
p. 183-192
Journal
Urban Planning, 5 (2020) 4
Issue topic
Built environment, ethics and everyday life
ISSN
2183-7635
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed