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Showing 1 - 13 of
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From the rise of constitutionalism during the rule of despotic
Qajars, foreign invasions, the Pahlavi regimes’ destructive
politics, economic, cultural and social modernization efforts and
the oil nationalization movement, to the Iranian Revolution, its
high hopes, broken promises, repression and intolerance causing
national discontent and another socio-political upheaval today, the
history of modern Iran has been eventful, unstable and turbulent.
In this textbook, Ali Rahnema draws on his experience teaching and
researching on modern Iran to render one hundred years of modern
Iranian politics and history into easy-to-follow episodic chapters.
Step by step, and taking a chronological approach, students are
given the core information, analysis, and critical assessment to
understand the flow of contemporary Iranian history. This is a
comprehensive and exhaustive guide for undergraduate and graduate
level courses on modern Iranian history and politics. The textbook
is complete with the following pedagogical features: * An initial
chapter on how to study Iranian history and how to approach
historiography * Images of key individuals discussed in each
chapter * Text boxes throughout to highlight key episodes,
concepts, and ideas *Three types of exam questions; factual and
analytical, seminar, and discussion at the end of each chapter *
Glossaries at the end of each chapter *A comprehensive timeline
Topics covered include: party formations; the flourishing of the
press; the expansion or reduction of political and civil rights;
repression and human right abuses; foreign intervention and
influence; obsessions over conspiracies; the influence of Western
ideologies, the role of nationalism, cultural and historical
Persian chauvinism; and Shi’i Islam and competing Shiisms.
Ali Rahnema's newest work is a meticulous historical reconstruction
of the events surrounding the Iranian coup d'etat in 1953 that led
to the overthrow of Mohammed Mosaddeq and his government.
Mosaddeq's removal from power has probably attracted more attention
than any other event occurring during his tenure because of the
role of foreign involvement; the political, economic and social
impact on Iran and the long-term impact the ousting had on
Iran-U.S. relations. Drawing on a wealth of American, British and
Iranian sources, Rahnema closely examines the four-day period
between the first failed coup and the second successful attempt,
investigating in fine detail how the two coups were conceptualised,
rationalised and then executed by players on both the
Anglo-American and Iranian sides. Through painstaking research into
little-studied sources, Rahnema casts new light on how a small
group of highly influential pro-Britain politicians and power
brokers with important connections revisited the realities on the
ground with the CIA operatives dispatched to Iran and how they
recalibrated a new, and ultimately successful, operational plan."
Shi 'ism caught the attention of the world as Iran experienced her
revolution in 1979 and was subsequently cast in the mold of a
monolithic discourse of radical political Islam. The spokespersons
of Shi'i Islam, in or out of power, have not been the sole
representatives of the faith. Nonconformist and uncompromising, the
Shi'i jurist and reformist Shari'at Sangelaji (1891-1944)
challenged certain popular Shi'i beliefs and the mainstream
clerical establishment, guarding and propagating it. In Shi'i
Reformation in Iran, Ali Rahnema offers a fresh understanding of
Sangelaji's reformist discourse from a theological standpoint, and
takes readers into the heart of the key religious debates in Iran
in the 1940s. Exploring Sangelaji's life, theological position and
disputations, Rahnema demonstrates that far from being change
resistant, debates around why and how to reform the faith have long
been at the heart of Shi'i Islam. Drawing on the writings and
sermons of Sangelaji, as well as interviews with his son, the book
provides a detailed and comprehensive introduction to the
reformist's ideas. As such it offers scholars of religion and
Middle Eastern politics alike a penetrating insight into the impact
that these ideas have had on Shi'ism - an impact which is still
felt today.
Shi 'ism caught the attention of the world as Iran experienced her
revolution in 1979 and was subsequently cast in the mold of a
monolithic discourse of radical political Islam. The spokespersons
of Shi'i Islam, in or out of power, have not been the sole
representatives of the faith. Nonconformist and uncompromising, the
Shi'i jurist and reformist Shari'at Sangelaji (1891-1944)
challenged certain popular Shi'i beliefs and the mainstream
clerical establishment, guarding and propagating it. In Shi'i
Reformation in Iran, Ali Rahnema offers a fresh understanding of
Sangelaji's reformist discourse from a theological standpoint, and
takes readers into the heart of the key religious debates in Iran
in the 1940s. Exploring Sangelaji's life, theological position and
disputations, Rahnema demonstrates that far from being change
resistant, debates around why and how to reform the faith have long
been at the heart of Shi'i Islam. Drawing on the writings and
sermons of Sangelaji, as well as interviews with his son, the book
provides a detailed and comprehensive introduction to the
reformist's ideas. As such it offers scholars of religion and
Middle Eastern politics alike a penetrating insight into the impact
that these ideas have had on Shi'ism - an impact which is still
felt today.
From the rise of constitutionalism during the rule of despotic
Qajars, foreign invasions, the Pahlavi regimes’ destructive
politics, economic, cultural and social modernization efforts and
the oil nationalization movement, to the Iranian Revolution, its
high hopes, broken promises, repression and intolerance causing
national discontent and another socio-political upheaval today, the
history of modern Iran has been eventful, unstable and turbulent.
In this textbook, Ali Rahnema draws on his experience teaching and
researching on modern Iran to render one hundred years of modern
Iranian politics and history into easy-to-follow episodic chapters.
Step by step, and taking a chronological approach, students are
given the core information, analysis, and critical assessment to
understand the flow of contemporary Iranian history. This is a
comprehensive and exhaustive guide for undergraduate and graduate
level courses on modern Iranian history and politics. The textbook
is complete with the following pedagogical features: * An initial
chapter on how to study Iranian history and how to approach
historiography * Images of key individuals discussed in each
chapter * Text boxes throughout to highlight key episodes,
concepts, and ideas *Three types of exam questions; factual and
analytical, seminar, and discussion at the end of each chapter *
Glossaries at the end of each chapter *A comprehensive timeline
Topics covered include: party formations; the flourishing of the
press; the expansion or reduction of political and civil rights;
repression and human right abuses; foreign intervention and
influence; obsessions over conspiracies; the influence of Western
ideologies, the role of nationalism, cultural and historical
Persian chauvinism; and Shi’i Islam and competing Shiisms.
Ali Rahnema's work is a meticulous historical reconstruction of the
Iranian coup d'etat in 1953 that led to the overthrow of Mohammed
Mosaddeq and his government. Mosaddeq's removal from power has
probably attracted more attention than any other event occurring
during his tenure because of the role of foreign involvement, the
political, economic and social impact on Iran, and the long-term
impact the ousting had on Iran-US relations. Drawing on American,
British and Iranian sources, Rahnema closely examines the four-day
period between the first failed coup and the second successful
attempt, investigating in fine detail how the two coups were
conceptualised, rationalised and executed by players on both the
Anglo-American and Iranian sides. Through painstaking research into
little-studied sources, Rahnema casts new light on how a small
group of highly influential pro-Britain politicians and power
brokers revisited the realities on the ground with the CIA
operatives dispatched to Iran and how they recalibrated a new, and
ultimately successful, operational plan.
A superstitious reading of the world based on religion may be
harmless at a private level, yet employed as a political tool it
can have more sinister implications. As this fascinating book by
Ali Rahnema, a distinguished Iranian intellectual, relates,
superstition and mystical beliefs have endured and influenced
ideology and political strategy in Iran from the founding of the
Safavid dynasty in the sixteenth century to the present day. The
endurance of these beliefs has its roots in a particular brand of
popular Shiism, which was compiled and systematized by the eminent
cleric Mohammad Baqer Majlesi in the seventeenth century. Majlesi,
who is considered by some to be the father of Iranian Shiism,
encouraged believers to accept fantastical notions as part of their
faith and to venerate their leaders as superhuman. As Rahnema
demonstrates through a close reading of the Persian sources and
with examples from contemporary Iranian politics, it is this
supposed connectedness to the hidden world that has allowed leaders
such as Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlavi and Mahmud Ahmadinejad to
present themselves and their entourage as representatives of the
divine, and their rivals as the embodiment of evil.
On 8 February 1971, Marxist revolutionaries attacked the
gendarmerie outpost at the village of Siyahkal in Iran’s Gilan
province. Barely two months later, the Iranian People’s Fada’i
Guerrillas officially announced their existence and began a long,
drawn-out urban guerrilla war against the Shah’s regime. In Call
to Arms, Ali Rahnema provides a comprehensive history of the
Fada’is, beginning by asking why so many of Iran’s best and
brightest chose revolutionary Marxism in the face of absolutist
rule. He traces how radicalised university students from different
ideological backgrounds morphed into the Marxist Fada’is in 1971,
and sheds light on their theory, practice and evolution. While the
Fada’is failed to directly bring about the fall of the Shah,
Rahnema shows they had a lasting impact on society and they
ultimately saw their objective achieved.
How did the Shah of Iran become a modern despot? In 1953, Iranian
monarch Mohammad-Reza Shah Pahlavi emerged victorious from a power
struggle with his prime minister, Mohammad Mosaddeq, thanks to a
coup masterminded by Britain and the United States. Mosaddeq
believed the Shah should reign not rule, but the Shah was
determined that no one would make him a mere symbol. In this
meticulous political history, Ali Rahnema details Iran’s slow
transition from constitutional to despotic monarchy. He examines
the tug of war between the Shah, his political opposition, a nation
in search of greater liberty, and successive US administrations
with their changing priorities. He shows how the Shah gradually
assumed control over the legislature, the judiciary, the executive,
and the media, and clamped down on his opponents’ activities. By
1968, the Shah’s turn to despotism was complete. The consequences
would be far-reaching.
Ali Shariati is, for many, the ideological father of the Iranian
revolution. A charismatic leader and teacher, his radical blend of
Islam and Marxism mobilized a whole generation of young Iranians.
Now available in paperback, this full-length political biography
looks at Ali Shariati's life and thought in the context of the
complex and contradictory cultural, social and political conditions
of the Iranian society that shaped him.
A superstitious reading of the world based on religion may be
harmless at a private level, yet employed as a political tool it
can have more sinister implications. As this fascinating book by
Ali Rahnema, a distinguished Iranian intellectual, relates,
superstition and mystical beliefs have endured and influenced
ideology and political strategy in Iran from the founding of the
Safavid dynasty in the sixteenth century to the present day. The
endurance of these beliefs has its roots in a particular brand of
popular Shiism, which was compiled and systematized by the eminent
cleric Mohammad Baqer Majlesi in the seventeenth century. Majlesi,
who is considered by some to be the father of Iranian Shiism,
encouraged believers to accept fantastical notions as part of their
faith and to venerate their leaders as superhuman. As Rahnema
demonstrates through a close reading of the Persian sources and
with examples from contemporary Iranian politics, it is this
supposed connectedness to the hidden world that has allowed leaders
such as Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlavi and Mahmud Ahmadinejad to
present themselves and their entourage as representatives of the
divine, and their rivals as the embodiment of evil.
Ever since they became conscious of their relative decline, the
societies of the Middle East, and other Islamic countries more
generally, have turned to Islam as an antidote to humiliation and
decadence. This book examines the political environments, lives and
works of those diverse nineteenth and twentieth century Muslim
thinkers who believed that Islam was capable of providing practical
solutions to the problems of the modern world. The volume provides
a balanced account of their contribution to contemporary
revolutionary Islam and to political developments in countries from
Morocco to Indonesia. The writings and political activity of
al-Afghani, Muhammad Abduh, Ayatollah Khomeini, Sayyid Abu'l-A'la
Mawdudi, Hasan al-Banna, Sayyid Qutb, Musa al-Sadr, Ali Shariati
and Muhammad Baqr al-Sadr are considered, explaining the roots of
movements as diverse as the Muslim Brotherhood, the Jama'at-i
Islami, the radical Iranian clergy and the militant Shi'i of
Lebanon. The book provides an ideal introduction to the complexity
and variety of Islamic revival, revealing the motivations of the
thinkers who have reshaped the political vocabulary of Islam. Ali
Rahnema's major new introductory chapter puts these still hugely
influential Muslim thinkers and the movements they inspired in the
context of the extraordinarily changed circumstances confronting
Islamic countries both internally and internationally since 9/11.
He explores the dangers of any Western-Islamic standoff in a
situation where both Muslim terrorists and certain chauvinist
Christian elements are misusing the religions they ostensibly
espouse. It becomes all the more important for Muslims and
non-Muslims to understand the real thinking that has long gone in
influential Islamic circles. This book intends to make a
contribution in this regard.
This major new study examines the central tenets of Islamic
economics, both in theory and in practice. The authors pinpoint the
uniqueness of the Islamic approach, both in its conception of the
world's resources and in its attitude to human endeavour. Their
book illuminates the distinctive nature of an economics which is
based neither on meeting the demands of the individual consumer,
nor on increasing the level of general welfare, but on maximising
the pleasure of God. The different schools of Islamic thought are
then compared and their interpretations analysed in terms of their
approaches to plan and market, centralisation and decentralisation,
property rights, profit and social obligation. A detailed
historical survey follows of the experience of four very different
Muslim countries: Libya, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Iran. The
authors examine how the implementation of Islamic economic
solutions has worked out in reality, often in the context of a
tense political situation. They look at the practicality of such
solutions in the present day, assessing both their economic
performance and their success in guiding society towards the
Islamic ideal. The book as a whole allows the reader to grasp the
multifarious nature of Islamic thought in economic matters, its
contradictory and often contentious character, and the uses to
which Islam has been put by governments with clearly diverse aims.
Students of economics and of the Middle East will find it a useful
guide to the new terms in which an old and fierce debate is being
conducted.
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