The traditional textile art "Kar O Čāle" and the narration of the "Serpent King" stories by Zoroastrian women of Iran: textile art and Serpent King stories

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The traditional textile art "Kar O Čāle" and the narration of the "Serpent King" stories by Zoroastrian women of Iran : textile art and Serpent King stories . / Pashootanizadeh, Azadeh.

In: Indigenous Knowledge, 2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Pashootanizadeh, A 2020, 'The traditional textile art "Kar O Čāle" and the narration of the "Serpent King" stories by Zoroastrian women of Iran: textile art and Serpent King stories ', Indigenous Knowledge.

APA

Pashootanizadeh, A. (2020). The traditional textile art "Kar O Čāle" and the narration of the "Serpent King" stories by Zoroastrian women of Iran: textile art and Serpent King stories . Indigenous Knowledge.

Vancouver

Pashootanizadeh A. The traditional textile art "Kar O Čāle" and the narration of the "Serpent King" stories by Zoroastrian women of Iran: textile art and Serpent King stories . Indigenous Knowledge. 2020.

Author

Pashootanizadeh, Azadeh. / The traditional textile art "Kar O Čāle" and the narration of the "Serpent King" stories by Zoroastrian women of Iran : textile art and Serpent King stories . In: Indigenous Knowledge. 2020.

Bibtex

@article{6e75c5d188804d7fa97f6256b3a4fb63,
title = "The traditional textile art {"}Kar O {\v C}āle{"} and the narration of the {"}Serpent King{"} stories by Zoroastrian women of Iran: textile art and Serpent King stories ",
abstract = "In the past, the occupation of Zoroastrian men was agriculture and animal husbandry, and Zoroastrian women inherited the spinning and textile arts of previous generations, especially the Sassanid period. Women's occupations complemented men's occupations, turning non-food products into clothing. Sericulture also had a long history, and silkworm breeding was a domestic and favorite occupation of Zoroastrian women. The relationship between male and female occupations promoted a culture of {"}Hamazuri{"}. The transfer of traditional Zoroastrian textile techniques coincided with the spinning of fibers and the narration of the oral stories of DariBehdini, the {"}Serpent King{"}.The telling of these stories led to the formation and promotion of proverbs. The connection of the Iranians with the Persian trade of India made the traditional textile commercial and industrial and caused the destruction of the techniques and equipments of art {"}Kāro{\v C}āle{"}. In addition, the traditional spinning of Zoroastrian women, which was accompanied by these stories, disappeared. Valuable points, in addition to recording part of the folklore literature, is the influence and relationship between the stories of the serpent king and the traditional spinning of Iranian Zoroastrian women. Method of data collection in the form of field and library interviews; It is a descriptive-analytical comparison approach.",
author = "Azadeh Pashootanizadeh",
year = "2020",
language = "English",
journal = "Indigenous Knowledge",
issn = "2538-2543",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The traditional textile art "Kar O Čāle" and the narration of the "Serpent King" stories by Zoroastrian women of Iran

T2 - textile art and Serpent King stories

AU - Pashootanizadeh, Azadeh

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - In the past, the occupation of Zoroastrian men was agriculture and animal husbandry, and Zoroastrian women inherited the spinning and textile arts of previous generations, especially the Sassanid period. Women's occupations complemented men's occupations, turning non-food products into clothing. Sericulture also had a long history, and silkworm breeding was a domestic and favorite occupation of Zoroastrian women. The relationship between male and female occupations promoted a culture of "Hamazuri". The transfer of traditional Zoroastrian textile techniques coincided with the spinning of fibers and the narration of the oral stories of DariBehdini, the "Serpent King".The telling of these stories led to the formation and promotion of proverbs. The connection of the Iranians with the Persian trade of India made the traditional textile commercial and industrial and caused the destruction of the techniques and equipments of art "KāroČāle". In addition, the traditional spinning of Zoroastrian women, which was accompanied by these stories, disappeared. Valuable points, in addition to recording part of the folklore literature, is the influence and relationship between the stories of the serpent king and the traditional spinning of Iranian Zoroastrian women. Method of data collection in the form of field and library interviews; It is a descriptive-analytical comparison approach.

AB - In the past, the occupation of Zoroastrian men was agriculture and animal husbandry, and Zoroastrian women inherited the spinning and textile arts of previous generations, especially the Sassanid period. Women's occupations complemented men's occupations, turning non-food products into clothing. Sericulture also had a long history, and silkworm breeding was a domestic and favorite occupation of Zoroastrian women. The relationship between male and female occupations promoted a culture of "Hamazuri". The transfer of traditional Zoroastrian textile techniques coincided with the spinning of fibers and the narration of the oral stories of DariBehdini, the "Serpent King".The telling of these stories led to the formation and promotion of proverbs. The connection of the Iranians with the Persian trade of India made the traditional textile commercial and industrial and caused the destruction of the techniques and equipments of art "KāroČāle". In addition, the traditional spinning of Zoroastrian women, which was accompanied by these stories, disappeared. Valuable points, in addition to recording part of the folklore literature, is the influence and relationship between the stories of the serpent king and the traditional spinning of Iranian Zoroastrian women. Method of data collection in the form of field and library interviews; It is a descriptive-analytical comparison approach.

M3 - Journal article

JO - Indigenous Knowledge

JF - Indigenous Knowledge

SN - 2538-2543

ER -

ID: 400227265