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This book offers a nuanced and muti-layered approach towards
comprehending the possibilities of democratization or likelihood of
authoritarian resilience in the Muslim world. The volume highlights
the complex diversity within Islamist movements and parties-
characterised by internal tensions, struggles and contestations.
The very existence of this diversity within and among Islamist
movements, and their general willingness to partake in mainstream
politics, signals an important transformation in the Muslim world
over recent decades. It demonstrates that the Muslim world has
gravitated from the simplistic focus on the compatibility or
incompatibility of Islam and democracy. Islamist movements and
parties embody the multiple manifestations and trajectories within
political Islam. The granular case-studies and theological analyses
in this volume draw attention to the policy refinements,
socio-political reforms and ideological transformations engendered
by Muslim intellectuals and Islamist movements and ideologues. The
diverse political landscape in the Muslim world is inextricably
linked to the socio-political and theological shifts within
Islamism-in particular, the yearning for greater social, economic
and political justice, a yearning that lies at the core of an
inclusive wasatiyyah Islam.
"Fundamentalism" and "authoritarian secularism" are commonly
perceived as the two mutually exclusive paradigms available to
Muslim majority countries. Naser Ghobadzadeh highlights the recent
political developments that have challenged this perception. He
points to mainstream Islamist groups, such as the Muslim
Brotherhood and Al-Nahda, that have adopted a distinctly
secular-democratic approach to the state re-building process. Their
success or failure in transitioning to democracy remains to be
seen, but the political position these Islamic groups have carved
out suggests the viability of a third way. Ghobadzadeh examines the
case of Iran, which has a unique history with respect to the
relationship of religion and politics. The country has been subject
to both authoritarian secularization and authoritarian Islamization
over the last nine decades. While politico-religious discourse in
Iran is articulated in response to the Islamic state, it also bears
the scars of Iran's history of authoritarian secularizationthe
legacy of the Pahlavi regime. Ghobadzadeh conceptualizes this
politico-religious discourse as religious secularity. He uses this
apparent oxymoron to describe the Islamic quest for a democratic
secular state. Offering a new reading of Shiite political theology,
Ghobadzadeh argues that the Islamic state is detrimental to
religion while a secular state can be compatible with it. Going
further, he contends that maintaining a secular government is
crucial to the cultivation of genuine religious conviction. This
path-breaking analysis of Islamic history challenges existing
scholarship, and gives voice to a unique, and optimistic Islamist
perspective on what the future of Middle Eastern politics could be.
For more than forty years, there has been a religious government in
Iran that claims to be rooted in shi'i political theology. In this
book, Naser Ghobadzadeh intends to show that this reading of shi'i
political theology is a fundamental deviation from orthodox
shi'ism. The principle of theocracy is one of the most fundamental
principles of the shi'i orthodox belief system, but its realization
in practice depends on the return of the Twelfth Imam. Until that
day, the institution of government and political leadership falls
outside the scope of the authority of religious leaders. Naser
Ghobadzadeh shows that governmental-shi'ism is less than half a
century old and that its formation was not the product of a
transformation in orthodox shi'i political theology. Rather,
governmental-shi'ism was born in the political arena and has been
able to survive because it profits from government resources.
Coining the term 'theocratic secularism', this book argues for the
re-instatement of a form of political secularism in Iran.
Renewed authoritarianism, national disintegration, sectarian
violence, and the increasing radicalization of Jihadi-Salafism
since the Arab uprisings have significantly blurred visions for
constructive religion-state-society relations in the MENA region.
The dissolution of the 'Arab Spring' seems to have revived the
questionable notion of Islamic exceptionalism. In sharp contrast,
this book seeks to invalidate the supposed incompatibility of Islam
and secular democracy. It outlines a complex Islamic political
theology that undermines the religious basis of the unification of
religion and state, offering religious justification for their
separation. Naser Ghobadzadeh coins the seemingly oxymoronic notion
'religious secularity' to encapsulate the Islamic quest to
emancipate religion from state. In simultaneous opposition to both
the politicisation of Islam and authoritarian secularism, religious
secularity employs Islamic sources such as the Quran and Hadiths to
articulate a robust religious rationale for state secularism.
Whereas mainstream literature frequently presents being secular as
'antithetical to being religious', religious secularity blurs the
boundaries between the 'religious' and the 'secular'. This book
suggests that the rift between the religious and the secular is no
more pronounced than the relationship between the two understood in
dualistic terms, as evinced by Islamic history. Thus, religious
secularity supports a theoretical shift away from the
religious-secular dichotomy.
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