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The Prison of Time: Tehran’s Qasr Prison Museum as a Transfunctional Monument
Abstract by Dr. Zohreh Soltani On Session 261  (Archiving and Memory)

On Sunday, November 17 at 8:30 am

2019 Annual Meeting

Abstract
Tehran, Iran—February 12, 1979: under a photograph of the entrance to Qasr prison, an article in Ittila’at newspaper offers a minute-by-minute report on the “fall of the regime,” including the seizing of the capital’s three main prisons by armed protestors. Responding to a reporter’s question about the future of the Prisons, notorious as the primary detention centers for opponents of the Shah’s regime, a former political prisoner stated: “parts of these prisons can be used for their regular function, however the torture rooms and the isolation cells should be preserved as they are, and be opened to public viewing like Bastille prison in France, so that the people can see the catastrophic past with their own eyes.” Twenty-three years later, that memorialization started to be realized. Beginning with the opening of the Ebrat Museum in 2002 and followed by that of the Museum of the Qasr Prison in 2012, the Pahlavi regime’s sites of political imprisonment and torture have been museumified and monumentalized. Focusing on Qasr prison museum—initially constructed as a palace under Qajar rule, which was then transformed into a prison under the Pahlavi state—this paper addresses the relatively new phenomenon of the prison museum in Iran and aims to evaluate this new form of transfuntional monumental space. By dealing with the nation’s recent history, these transformations serve several functions for the Iranian state: they help to ensure the state’s legitimacy by publicizing the disappearance of political prisons, and therefore of political opposition; at the same time, they display the freedom of speech and critical political activity. But these transformations are not only physical; in the way they are managed, in the attempt at their sacralization—such as by burying newly-found remains of soldiers of the Iran-Iraq war on the grounds of Qasr—and in the carefully observed codes of conduct—such as regulating photography—these intricately arranged monumental sites are caught between being public and private, exhibiting and hiding, remembering and forgetting.
Discipline
Archaeology
Geographic Area
Iran
Sub Area
Identity/Representation