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virus: Street Slang Proves Big Hit with Book Lovers
« on: 2004-05-05 11:29:23 » |
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Street Slang Proves Big Hit with Book Lovers
May 5, 9:13 am ET=20
By Christian Oliver=20
TEHRAN (Reuters) - Persian is famed as the melodic, courtly language of = medieval poets such as Omar Khayyam and Hafez, but it is a dictionary of = vulgar street slang that is taking Iranian literary circles by storm. At = Tehran's annual book fair, the woman running the stall of the = dictionary's publisher Nashr-e Markaz had to explain to a disappointed = stream of book buyers that the sixth edition had already sold out.
Much of the slang is the vernacular of "Javads," a wayward breed of = young men who drive around Tehran, trying to lure girls into their cars.
Unsurprisingly, many of their racy, often chauvinistic expressions = derive from their beloved automobiles.
A "zero kilometer," a reference to a car with no mileage on the clock, = is a virgin. "Been in an accident" refers to a girl who has become = pregnant.
Girls' backsides, a favorite talking point of hot-blooded Javads, are = "hubcaps."
The most popular stall at the fair which opened Monday was one = specializing in books on the giddy social life of the Pahlavis, the = royal family deposed in the 1979 Islamic revolution.=20
"Iran's bestsellers at the moment are all contemporary history," said = Ahmad Pirani, who contributed to a book on the private life of the last = Shah. His colleague Paris reckoned he knew why: "People want to read = about this part of history to know who they are."
A white-turbaned mullah leafed through "Wives of the Shah."
In a country with few entertainments, Tehran's 11-day book fair is = viewed as a fun day out. Fast-food and ice-cream vendors do a brisk = trade.
Outside the exhibition rooms, couples exchanged tentative, illicit = caresses on the lawns as schoolgirls perched on a wall reading Tintin = comics. Publishing thresholds have relaxed a touch since liberal = President Mohammad Khatami came to power in 1997 but his attempts to = push through sweeping social reforms have been thwarted by conservative = supervisory bodies.
Iran zealously censors any works criticizing the Islamic system. It = banned "The Stoning of Soraya M," Freidoune Sahebjam's tale of violent, = arbitrary justice in rural Iran.
British novelist Salman Rushdie, sentenced to death by an Iranian fatwa = in 1989, is still taboo. An American book on male psychology called "All = Men Are Jerks Until Proven Otherwise" has also fallen foul of the = censors lately.
Religious and scientific texts dominated the fair's book stacks but = young people also snapped up horror novels, U. S. rock lyrics and = biographies of England footballer David Beckham.
Islamic publishing houses were also selling new technology: swarms of = women in the all-enveloping chador gathered round CD-ROM virtual tours = of holy shrines.
"I have come here almost every year," said black-bearded law student = Hamid Soleimani, 25. He had bought some books on the early martyrs of = Shi'ite Islam.
Elsewhere, a young woman in a green silk headscarf thumbed through a = Persian translation of "The Fox," D. H. Lawrence's tale of simmering = erotic tensions. Other stands were decked with works by American Jewish = actor and director Woody Allen.
Adel, a silver-haired religious bookseller from Tehran's sprawling = bazaar, said he was complementing his Korans with the adventures of = boy-wizard Harry Potter. "These J. K. Rowling books are selling pretty = well," he said.=20
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