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Azar Nafisi
Azar Nafisi is the author of
Reading Lolita in Tehran. Born in Tehran, Iran, she now lives in
the US and teaches at the School for Advanced International
Studies at Johns Hopkins University.
I lived in Iran until I was 13, and then my parents sent me to
England - to Lancaster - to finish my studies. That was when I
first tasted the pangs of exile.
I finally returned to Iran in 1979, when I got my degree in
English and American literature, and stayed for 18 years in the
Islamic republic.
When I first left Iran at the age of 13, Iran had become such a
shining star - it was the point to which all my desires and
dreams returned.
When I went back home after the revolution in 1979, I discovered
that home was not really home.
Everything that had been familiar during my youth had changed
beyond recognition.
When I was teaching at the University of Tehran we were
struggling against the implementation of the revolution rules.
From the very first years I returned, I was trying to redefine
what home meant.
Was it where you were born, was it where the values that you
cherish were practised?
It was a dilemma that I had to deal with over the 18 years that
I lived in Iran.
Certain things you take with you wherever you go. My passion has
always been books and literature, and teaching.
In the US I teach - and I also write.
The main difference is of course that the book that I recently
wrote could not have been written had I lived in my homeland.
But now that I have written this book, I can re-create the
relationship with the people living in Iran through my writings.
So I have not lost contact with Iran.
I think that this is what makes literature and books so
wonderful - they transcend geographical boundaries.

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