AUDIOBOOK

Persian Pictures

Gertrude Bell
4.7
(3)
Duration
5h 3m
Year
2024
Language
English

About

In 1892, Gertrude Bell visited Persia (now Iran) shortly after the appointment of her uncle, Sir Frank Lascelles, as British minister in Tehran. Three years later came Persian Pictures, Gertrude Bell's first written work, which presents a series of vivid sketches of Persian culture and society at the time. Bell explores various cities and landscapes, and encounters local characters along the way, providing a unique perspective on Persian life and customs. While much of what is depicted in Persian Pictures has long since changed, Bell's writing is a valuable account of the anachronisms and inconsistencies of the dying dynasty of medieval Persia. Her depiction of Muharram - the month of mourning for Imam Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Mohammed - and Ramadan, display a mind finely attuned to the differences and similarities between Islam and Christianity, and East and West. Persian Pictures is both travelogue and meditation - an elegiac and beautifully observed account of a spellbinding land.

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Reviews

Gertrude Bell recounts her 1892 tour of Persia (Iran) and Turkey. A late-Victorian floweriness and a sometimes condescending Orientalism are balanced by Bell's open mind, good nature, intelligence, and astute observations--all of which Juliet Stevenson conveys. Her narration is clear and energetic, and her voice, though somewhat nasal in her characterization of the author, is pleasant. Her precise
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