Talking Class in Tehroon

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Standard

Talking Class in Tehroon. / Elling, Rasmus Christian; Rezakhani, Khodadad.

I: Middle East Report, Bind 45, Winter 2015, Nr. 277, 01.03.2016, s. 6-9.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Elling, RC & Rezakhani, K 2016, 'Talking Class in Tehroon', Middle East Report, bind 45, Winter 2015, nr. 277, s. 6-9.

APA

Elling, R. C., & Rezakhani, K. (2016). Talking Class in Tehroon. Middle East Report, 45, Winter 2015(277), 6-9.

Vancouver

Elling RC, Rezakhani K. Talking Class in Tehroon. Middle East Report. 2016 mar. 1;45, Winter 2015(277):6-9.

Author

Elling, Rasmus Christian ; Rezakhani, Khodadad. / Talking Class in Tehroon. I: Middle East Report. 2016 ; Bind 45, Winter 2015, Nr. 277. s. 6-9.

Bibtex

@article{5418060c47af4bc5bae969c21ccab3f5,
title = "Talking Class in Tehroon",
abstract = "Persian, like any other language, is laced with references to class, both blatant and subtle. With idioms and metaphors, Iranians can identify and situate others, and thus themselves, within hierarchies of social status and privilege, both real and imagined. Some class-related terms can be traced back to medieval times, whereas others are of modern vintage, the linguistic legacy of television shows, pop songs, social media memes or street vernacular. Every day, it seems, an infectious set of phrases appears that make yesterday{\textquoteright}s seem embarrassingly antiquated.",
author = "Elling, {Rasmus Christian} and Khodadad Rezakhani",
year = "2016",
month = mar,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "45, Winter 2015",
pages = "6--9",
journal = "Middle East Report",
issn = "0899-2851",
publisher = "Middle East Research & Information Project",
number = "277",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Talking Class in Tehroon

AU - Elling, Rasmus Christian

AU - Rezakhani, Khodadad

PY - 2016/3/1

Y1 - 2016/3/1

N2 - Persian, like any other language, is laced with references to class, both blatant and subtle. With idioms and metaphors, Iranians can identify and situate others, and thus themselves, within hierarchies of social status and privilege, both real and imagined. Some class-related terms can be traced back to medieval times, whereas others are of modern vintage, the linguistic legacy of television shows, pop songs, social media memes or street vernacular. Every day, it seems, an infectious set of phrases appears that make yesterday’s seem embarrassingly antiquated.

AB - Persian, like any other language, is laced with references to class, both blatant and subtle. With idioms and metaphors, Iranians can identify and situate others, and thus themselves, within hierarchies of social status and privilege, both real and imagined. Some class-related terms can be traced back to medieval times, whereas others are of modern vintage, the linguistic legacy of television shows, pop songs, social media memes or street vernacular. Every day, it seems, an infectious set of phrases appears that make yesterday’s seem embarrassingly antiquated.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 45, Winter 2015

SP - 6

EP - 9

JO - Middle East Report

JF - Middle East Report

SN - 0899-2851

IS - 277

ER -

ID: 158357105