|
Home | News | Archive| RSS
twitter | facebook
|
| Payvand Iran News ... |
|
|
06/16/10
|
|
|
|
|
Social Networking Sites Aid Iranians Trying to Assert Identity
|
|
Source: VOA
Iranians, and especially Iranian youth, are
using the internet to connect with each other all over the world and assert
their own identities.

Sam Sedaei says that identity is like an
invisible man, and for him as an Iranian American, a coherent identity can be
even more difficult to see. A blogger for the
Huffington Post, Sedaei claims
that writing served as a sort of white powder for him, which he could then throw
over the invisible man and discover his shape. In his opinion, writing helps
affirm identities, which makes sites such as
Facebook, Twitter and other blogging
sites all the more important as Iran's youth tries to shape its own identity.
"That's how I see writing," said Sedaei. "It's not so much that it makes your
identity, but that it helps you see it, and it helps you be able to define it
better and understand it better. So to that extent, absolutely social networking
has a big role in helping Iranian youth."
In efforts to repress any revolutionary fervor in the past few years, Iran has
deemed large gatherings of people to be suspicious. But now with social
networking, Iranians can gather by the thousands on a Facebook group, or
communicate using Twitter. These new forms of communication are helping Iranian
youth communicate with each other and shape their identity just as Sedaei did.
But it was not only the Iranians inside Iran who were working with new forms of
communication to affirm their identities. Iranians living overseas, like Sedaei,
watched Iran closer than ever before. With tools such as social networking
sites, he says those Iranians became more than observers.
"Social networking allowed Iranians throughout the world to become participants
in a movement that was going on, on the ground," said Sedaei.
Iranians living outside Iran started contributing to the movement and supporting
the movement in more diverse ways than simply posting blog posts. Iranian art
flourished outside the country as Iranians began making art pertaining to the
revolution. Iranian underground musicians, such as the Iranian hip-hop musician
Hich-Kas (meaning nobody in Persian), started exporting their music over the
internet. This music is emotionally charged, full of political lyrics and
represents another fusion of Iranian and Western identity.
However, the movement still faces greater challenges than it did last year. The
same means of communication that were used to speak out are being used by the
government as a way of shutting down the opposition. The government controlled
media outlets such as newspapers, now appear online. Blogging sites are tracked
and some bloggers can even be arrested.
But is this going to be a problem for people trying to communicate in Iran?
Sedaei admits that the outflow of information from Iran has subsided, but he
does not believe that it has stopped forever. "Is it calmer now? Are people a
little less active than they were a few months ago or about a year ago? Yes. But
is it going to remain that way? We don't know. It is going to have ups and
downs," he said.
Iranians are moving towards a closer relationship with the rest of the world,
even against their own government. While the internet and social networking
sites are helping people connect with each other and breaking social barriers
inside Iran, it's also giving Iranians all over the world a connection with one
another, and support for each other even from thousands of miles away.
... Payvand News - 06/16/10 ... --
|
© Copyright 2010 NetNative
(All Rights Reserved) |
|
Join Payvand's Facebook Page
|