Knowledge

Khandaniha

Source 📝

136:, Amirani changed political camps and went from being a supporter of the monarchy to being its greatest critic. For forty years he had supported the monarchy in more than five hundred issues of his magazine, so that the sudden change of heart was not believed. In March 1979, Amirani was arrested and charged with participating in the political overthrow of then Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953. After four months, Amirani was released without charge. After six months, Amirani was arrested again, sentenced to death on 22 June 1981, and executed. 222: 22: 119:. He wrote on almost all subjects, from "Esoteric Aspects of Islamic Theology" to "Flying Saucers". Mansuri also introduced the Khandaniha serial story format. After completing a story, the articles were combined and sold as a book. The editions of these books reached several hundred thousand. In order to better control the press, in the mid-1970s under Prime Minister 87:
in August 1940 by Ali Asghar Amirani. Tehran had a horse racing track in Jalaliyeh Park, so Ali Asghar Amirani wanted to start a magazine covering horse racing because there was no paper that published race results immediately at that time. After Amirani was refused a license to run his own newspaper
95:
With the Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran in August 1941 and the subsequent occupation by British and Soviet troops, the licensing of newspapers was also reorganized, so that a large number of new daily and weekly newspapers appeared. Readers who were not used to this abundance of information
128:
now also took up politically controversial topics such as corruption, despotism and the abuse of power. Amirani directed his criticism primarily against the prime minister and the government. No criticism was aimed at the Shah, whom Amirani had historically supported.
88:
because of his young age, he found that publishing articles that had already been published did not require a separate license. So he put together a number of older articles and published them with the race results in a weekly magazine he called
123:
every magazine had to include a government-appointed publisher. It was only with the policy of the “open political space” that began in 1977 that the content of the magazines was no longer bound by specifications.
100:, in which the most important articles of the week from the most important newspapers were published together with an editorial by Amirani. Ali Asghar Amirani had found his format. 115:
had become so popular that it changed from once a week to three times a week. Increasingly, own articles were published in the journal. One of the main editors of the magazine was
72:, published gathered articles from other magazines in addition to its own articles, some in abridged form. The magazine was published from August 1940 to August 1979. 63: 116: 254: 158:
Cyrus Schayegh (2012). "Iran's Karaj Dam Affair: Emerging Mass Consumerism, the Politics of Promise, and the Cold War in the Third World".
160: 259: 249: 269: 264: 244: 274: 284: 226: 187: 104:
became an economic success. In the mid-1950s it published articles on Hollywood stars such as
279: 8: 133: 120: 68: 105: 169: 59: 35: 173: 238: 221: 84: 21: 89: 236: 157: 16:General interest magazine in Iran (1940–1979) 43: 161:Comparative Studies in Society and History 153: 151: 149: 20: 237: 75: 146: 255:Defunct magazines published in Iran 13: 14: 296: 214: 260:Magazines disestablished in 1979 220: 62:-language magazine published by 39: 250:1979 disestablishments in Iran 198:(in Persian). 9 September 1967 180: 1: 270:Magazines published in Tehran 265:Magazines established in 1940 139: 108:and on Iranian celebrities. 25:Cover page dated 10 May 1972 7: 245:1940 establishments in Iran 10: 301: 275:Persian-language magazines 174:10.1017/S0010417512000254 285:General interest digests 96:increasingly turned to 26: 24: 229:at Wikimedia Commons 76:History and profile 134:Islamic Revolution 121:Amir Abbas Hoveyda 111:By the mid-1970s, 64:Ali Asghar Amirani 27: 225:Media related to 192:، مهره‌ای پنهانی" 117:Zabiholla Mansuri 106:Gina Lollobrigida 292: 224: 208: 207: 205: 203: 184: 178: 177: 155: 57: 54: 51: 48: 45: 300: 299: 295: 294: 293: 291: 290: 289: 235: 234: 217: 212: 211: 201: 199: 186: 185: 181: 156: 147: 142: 83:was founded in 78: 69:Reader's Digest 55: 52: 49: 46: 17: 12: 11: 5: 298: 288: 287: 282: 277: 272: 267: 262: 257: 252: 247: 231: 230: 216: 215:External links 213: 210: 209: 179: 144: 143: 141: 138: 77: 74: 66:, which, like 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 297: 286: 283: 281: 278: 276: 273: 271: 268: 266: 263: 261: 258: 256: 253: 251: 248: 246: 243: 242: 240: 233: 228: 223: 219: 218: 197: 193: 191: 183: 175: 171: 167: 163: 162: 154: 152: 150: 145: 137: 135: 130: 127: 122: 118: 114: 109: 107: 103: 99: 93: 91: 86: 82: 73: 71: 70: 65: 61: 53:worth reading 41: 37: 33: 32: 23: 19: 280:Pahlavi Iran 232: 200:. Retrieved 195: 189: 182: 165: 159: 131: 125: 112: 110: 101: 97: 94: 80: 79: 67: 30: 29: 28: 18: 239:Categories 227:Khandaniha 168:(3): 625. 140:References 132:After the 126:Khandaniha 113:Khandaniha 102:Khandaniha 98:Khandaniha 90:Khandaniha 81:Khandaniha 31:Khandaniha 190:خواندنیها 40:خواندنیها 58:) was a 60:Persian 47:  36:Persian 202:16 May 188:"مجله 85:Tehran 196:IICHS 204:2021 44:lit. 170:doi 241:: 194:. 166:54 164:. 148:^ 92:. 42:; 38:: 206:. 176:. 172:: 56:' 50:' 34:(

Index


Persian
Persian
Ali Asghar Amirani
Reader's Digest
Tehran
Khandaniha
Gina Lollobrigida
Zabiholla Mansuri
Amir Abbas Hoveyda
Islamic Revolution



Comparative Studies in Society and History
doi
10.1017/S0010417512000254
"مجله خواندنیها، مهره‌ای پنهانی"

Khandaniha
Categories
1940 establishments in Iran
1979 disestablishments in Iran
Defunct magazines published in Iran
Magazines disestablished in 1979
Magazines established in 1940
Magazines published in Tehran
Persian-language magazines
Pahlavi Iran
General interest digests

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.