Saving Face

Manata Hashemi
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Abstract

This chapter examines the history and structure of face (aberu) and facework in Iran. Upon analyzing the interlinkages between saving face and cultural norms of modesty, the chapter argues that face-savers uphold a moral code comprised of four rules—hard work, self-sufficiency, appearance, and purity—that mitigate threats to their face. These rules serve as moral evaluative distinctions by which both face-savers and members of their community judge others’ moral worth. This process leads to a system of micro-stratification within low-income communities, whereby those who have accumulated moral capital by mimicking middle-class values hold a higher status than those who have not. By exchanging their moral capital for social and economic benefits, face-savers come to gain social mobility within poverty. Agency thus lies in the process of ritual compliance to the social order. The chapter further discusses how face-savers’ aspirations for middle-class lifestyles not only reflect the embourgeoisement of Iranian society beyond the middle and upper classes, but also the state’s own developmental initiatives.
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爱面子
本章考察了伊朗面部(aberu)和面部雕刻的历史和结构。在分析了面子和谦虚的文化规范之间的相互联系后,本章认为,面子保护者坚持由四条规则组成的道德准则——努力工作、自给自足、外表和纯洁——这四条规则减轻了对他们面子的威胁。这些规则起到了道德评价的作用,爱面子者和社区成员都通过这些规则来判断他人的道德价值。这一过程导致了低收入社区内部的微观分层系统,通过模仿中产阶级价值观积累道德资本的人比没有积累道德资本的人拥有更高的地位。通过用道德资本换取社会和经济利益,爱面子的人在贫困中获得了社会流动性。因此,能动性存在于仪式服从社会秩序的过程中。本章进一步讨论了爱面子者对中产阶级生活方式的渴望,这不仅反映了伊朗社会中产阶级和上层阶级之外的资产阶级化,也反映了国家自身的发展举措。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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Saving Face All in a Day’s Work Dress for Success
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