
Between 1940 and 1960, a society shaken by occupation,
political conflict, rapid urban growth, and expanding education began to
redefine its intellectual and artistic life. New institutions, media, and
audiences altered how literature, music, painting, cinema, and public debate
reached people across cities and provincial centres. These developments did not
begin from an empty landscape. Since the Constitutional Revolution of
1905–1911, newspapers, political societies, secular schools, translations, and new
literary forms had already challenged older patterns of authority. During the
reign of Reza Shah Pahlavi (1878–1944), from 1925 to 1941, state centralisation
accelerated the creation of ministries, schools, museums, universities, roads,
and bureaucratic professions. It also imposed censorship, restricted political
organisation, weakened independent associations, and attempted to regulate
clothing, education, language, and public behaviour. Cultural change therefore
entered the 1940s with a double inheritance: a stronger national infrastructure
and a public sphere whose independence had been severely limited. A decisive
rupture came with the Anglo-Soviet invasion of August 1941. British and Soviet
forces occupied the country because of its strategic position and its
importance as a supply route to the Soviet Union during the Second World War.
Reza Shah abdicated on 16 September 1941, and his son Mohammad Reza Shah
Pahlavi (1919–1980) inherited a throne whose authority was initially far weaker
than that of his father. Foreign armies, inflation, food shortages, political
rivalry, and regional unrest marked the decade, yet the reduction of censorship
created an unusually active intellectual environment. Newspapers and political
publications multiplied. The Tudeh Party, founded in 1941, organised writers,
teachers, students, workers, and members of the urban middle classes around
socialist ideas, anti-fascism, labour rights, and opposition to foreign
domination.
Nationalists,
constitutionalists, religious activists, monarchists, and liberal professionals
developed their own circles and publications. Tehran became the main centre of
these disputes, although Tabriz, Isfahan, Shiraz, Mashhad, Rasht, and other
cities also sustained important local activity. The written word acquired a
political urgency rarely seen during the previous decade. Articles on
education, poverty, women, language, landownership, oil, imperialism, and
national identity circulated among readers who increasingly regarded literature
and journalism as instruments of public intervention. Such openness remained
unstable. The Soviet presence in northern provinces, the autonomous government
established in Azerbaijan in 1945, and the Kurdish Republic of Mahabad in 1946
exposed conflicts between centralisation, regional identities, linguistic
rights, and foreign power. Both regional governments disappeared after Soviet
withdrawal and the return of central forces in late 1946. That same year, the
First Congress of Iranian Writers brought together poets, novelists,
translators, and critics in Tehran. Its debates revealed a generation trying to
determine whether literary value should be judged through social commitment,
formal innovation, national tradition, or individual vision. Classical Persian
poetry still possessed immense prestige, and the works of Ferdowsi, Saadi,
Hafez, Rumi, and other canonical authors remained central to education and
cultivated conversation. Yet reverence for inherited forms no longer prevented
experimentation. Intellectuals were reading Russian realism, French fiction, European
philosophy, Marxist theory, and Anglo-American literature in translation.
Translation became one of the principal engines of change because it introduced
new genres, narrative techniques, political concepts, and models of criticism.
Magazines such as “Sokhan,” founded in 1943 by Parviz Natel-Khanlari
(1914–1991), created a serious forum for philology, literary history,
contemporary writing, and translations. They helped form a readership able to
move between classical scholarship and recent international debates. Prose
fiction became an especially effective means of examining a society undergoing
rapid change. Sadeq Hedayat (1903–1951), whose “The Blind Owl” had first
appeared in Bombay in 1937 and circulated more freely at home after 1941,
transformed the possibilities of Persian narrative through psychological
disturbance, irony, folklore, historical memory, and the experience of
alienation. In “Haji Aqa,” published in 1945, he attacked hypocrisy,
opportunism, and the alliance between wealth, piety, and political calculation.
Bozorg Alavi (1904–1997) connected fiction with imprisonment, clandestine
politics, and the emotional consequences of repression; his novel “Her Eyes,”
published in 1952, placed artistic memory, political commitment, and personal
secrecy within a tightly controlled narrative. Sadeq Chubak (1916–1998), in
“The Puppet Show” of 1945, introduced a severe social realism attentive to
poverty, cruelty, sexuality, and people excluded from respectable
representation. Simin Daneshvar (1921–2012) published “Quenched Fire” in 1948,
establishing a female literary voice within a field still largely governed by
male institutions. Jalal Al-e Ahmad (1923–1969), beginning with “The Exchange
of Visits” in 1945, observed family authority, religious custom, provincial
life, political disillusionment, and the frustrations of educated city
dwellers.
These writers differed
greatly in style and ideology, yet their work shared an interest in individuals
caught within changing social structures. The merchant, civil servant,
schoolteacher, provincial migrant, impoverished labourer, dissatisfied wife,
political prisoner, and isolated intellectual entered fiction with
unprecedented force.
Poetry
experienced an equally deep transformation. Nima Yushij (1897–1960) had begun
challenging conventional metre and rhyme during the 1920s, but his influence
became much wider in the 1940s and 1950s. His poetry reorganised the line
around movement, cadence, perception, and dramatic situation. Rural landscapes,
northern villages, night, winter, birds, forests, and distant voices became
part of a language capable of expressing political anxiety and private
uncertainty. Younger poets developed his innovations in sharply individual
directions. Mehdi Akhavan-Sales (1929–1990) combined Nimaic structure with
archaic Persian vocabulary and historical memory. His collection “Winter,”
published in 1956, gave poetic form to the desolation that followed the political
defeat of 1953. Ahmad Shamlou (1925–2000) moved towards freer rhythms,
colloquial force, political imagery, and a style shaped by both Persian
traditions and international poetry; “Fresh Air,” published in 1957, became an
important statement of this new sensibility. Forugh Farrokhzad (1934–1967)
entered literary life with “The Captive” in 1955, followed by “The Wall” in
1956 and “Rebellion” in 1958. Her early poems placed female experience,
marriage, erotic feeling, loneliness, and revolt within a public literary
language that many readers found disturbing. Her importance cannot be reduced
to scandal. She changed who could speak in Persian poetry and what kinds of
private experience could claim artistic seriousness. Women’s participation in
public life had broader historical foundations. Reza Shah’s compulsory
unveiling policy, imposed in 1936, had forced many women to abandon the veil in
public and had also caused others, especially in religious and traditional families,
to withdraw from streets, schools, and institutions. After his abdication in
1941, compulsory enforcement weakened, and forms of dress became more varied.
Female education continued to expand, although access remained strongly
affected by class, region, and family attitudes. Women appeared with greater
visibility as teachers, university students, writers, journalists, singers, and
performers. Their public presence did not produce immediate legal equality, and
women would not receive national voting rights until 1963. Nevertheless, the
1940s and 1950s altered the social position of educated urban women.
Daneshvar’s fiction, Farrokhzad’s poetry, women’s magazines, female radio
performers, and actresses in commercial cinema showed that national life could no
longer be represented solely through male voices. These changes provoked
admiration, curiosity, moral criticism, and anxiety because they touched
marriage, domestic authority, sexuality, employment, and relations between
generations. Universities provided a durable institutional setting for
such developments. The University of Tehran, founded in 1934, became the
leading centre for law, medicine, literature, science, archaeology, and
political discussion. Its College of Fine Arts opened in 1940 under the
direction of André Godard (1881–1965), a French architect and archaeologist
whose work in the country had already connected historical preservation with
contemporary architectural training. Students encountered European academic
methods, recent painting, sculpture, architecture, and the visual inheritance
of Persian miniature, calligraphy, tilework, manuscript illumination, and
popular religious art. This encounter did not produce a single national style.
It created disputes over imitation, authenticity, technique, and the social
function of art. Jalil Ziapour (1920–1999), associated with the magazine
“Khorus-e Jangi,” founded in 1949, defended experimentation influenced by
Cubism while drawing attention to tribal motifs and local decorative
traditions. The Apadana Gallery, also opened in 1949, offered painters and
critics a space outside official exhibition structures.
By the time the first Tehran Biennial was held in
1958, painting had become part of a wider argument about national identity. Artists
were asking how a contemporary visual language could emerge from a society
possessing a powerful historical heritage and undergoing accelerated urban
transformation. Music reached a far larger audience through broadcasting.
Radio Tehran began regular transmissions
on 24 April 1940. News, speeches, religious programmes, poetry recitation,
European orchestral music, and Persian classical performance entered homes,
cafés, government offices, and public spaces. The radio changed the status of
musicians because performers who had once depended on courts, aristocratic
households, private gatherings, or limited concerts could now acquire national
recognition. Ruhollah Khaleqi (1906–1965) played a major role in arranging and
institutionalising Persian music for orchestral and radio performance. In 1944,
he composed “Ey Iran,” with words by Hossein Gol-e-Golab (1895–1985); the song,
associated with resistance to foreign occupation and national dignity, became
one of the most enduring patriotic works of the period. The singer
Gholam-Hossein Banan (1911–1986) brought a refined vocal style to radio
audiences, while instrumentalists and composers developed new arrangements
around the modal system of Persian classical music. In 1956, Davud
Pirnia (1900–1971) established the radio series “Golha.” These programmes
combined carefully selected classical poems, literary commentary, vocal
performance, and instrumental music. “Golha” gave radio entertainment a high
literary standard and made verses by Hafez, Saadi, Rumi, and more recent poets
part of daily listening. Broadcasting thus joined old poetic authority to
contemporary technology and helped create a shared national repertoire.
Popular entertainment expanded alongside
elite artistic institutions. Domestic film production, largely interrupted
between 1937 and 1948, revived as studios, cinemas, dubbing companies,
technicians, and commercial distributors developed in Tehran. Esmail Koushan
(1917–1981) helped establish a studio-based industry through Mitra Film and
later Pars Film. Producers relied on melodrama, comedy, crime stories,
historical adventure, music, and dance because these forms attracted broad
urban audiences. Critics eventually used the label “Filmfarsi” for productions
they considered formulaic, technically weak, and dependent on Egyptian, Indian,
Turkish, or American models. Commercial cinema still possesses considerable
historical importance. It displayed new clothing, automobiles, restaurants,
nightclubs, neighbourhoods, courtship, crime, family conflict, and social
mobility to viewers confronting unfamiliar patterns of urban life. Samuel
Khachikian (1923–2001) introduced a more controlled use of suspense, lighting, crime
narrative, and visual atmosphere during the 1950s, showing that popular genres
could support technical ambition. Television began commercial broadcasting in
Tehran in 1958, adding imported programmes, advertising, variety shows, and
domestic productions to an already changing media environment. The
political crisis surrounding oil placed every field of intellectual activity
under pressure. Parliament nationalised the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company in March
1951, and Mohammad Mossadegh (1882–1967) became prime minister the following
month. His government became the focus of hopes for constitutional government,
economic independence, and resistance to British power. It also faced royal
opposition, foreign pressure, economic sanctions, internal division, and
conflict with several political and religious groups. On 19 August 1953, a coup
supported by British and American intelligence removed Mossadegh and
strengthened the authority of Mohammad Reza Shah. The consequences for public
life were profound. Political parties were suppressed, leftist networks were
broken, publications were closed, and numerous activists, writers, and students
were imprisoned or forced into exile. The establishment of the security
organisation SAVAK in 1957 gave surveillance and censorship a more permanent
institutional form. Artistic production continued, yet language became more
indirect.
Historical analogy, winter
landscapes, ruined gardens, imprisonment, silence, failed journeys, and private
estrangement often carried meanings that could not be stated openly. Political
defeat altered literary tone without eliminating debate. Religious scholarship
and religious association also formed part of this changing environment.
Ayatollah Hossein Borujerdi (1875–1961), who became the leading Twelver Shi‘i
authority in Qom during the mid-1940s, strengthened the seminary’s finances,
educational organisation, publishing activity, and national network. Mosques,
mourning ceremonies, charitable associations, sermons, and religious
publications continued to shape everyday life far beyond the circles reached by
galleries or literary magazines. Urban religious families responded to state
secularisation, communist organisation, foreign influence, and new social
customs in different ways. Some defended established forms of authority, while
others supported education, scientific learning, constitutional legality, and
limited reform. This sphere should not be treated as separate from the
intellectual history of the period. Debates over justice, foreign domination,
moral conduct, education, and national independence moved between secular and
religious settings, sometimes producing alliances and at other times open
conflict. By 1960, a recognisable national system of publishing, broadcasting,
higher education, visual art, commercial entertainment, and literary criticism
had emerged. Its reach remained unequal. Tehran possessed resources unavailable
to many provincial towns, and villages with low literacy rates could
participate more easily through radio than through books, galleries, or
universities. Persian functioned as the principal language of education and
national publication, while Azerbaijani, Kurdish, Arabic, Armenian, Assyrian,
and other linguistic communities faced different degrees of restriction and
opportunity. Court patronage still mattered, classical learning remained
prestigious, religious institutions retained deep social authority, and family
networks continued to determine many individual possibilities. At the same
time, writers, artists, students, performers, translators, and readers had
created institutions and expectations that could no longer be contained within
older elite circles. The celebrated achievements of later decades grew from
this difficult twenty-year period, when occupation, censorship, political hope,
repression, technological change, and artistic experiment reshaped the
country’s understanding of itself.
( Roberto
Minichini )