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In this book, Shaul Mishal and Ori Goldberg explore the ways in
which Shiite leaderships in Iran and Lebanon approach themselves
and their world. Contrary to the violent and radical image of
religious leaderships in the Islamic Republic of Iran and Lebanese
Hizballah, the political vision and practice of these leaderships
view the world as a middle ground, shying away from absolutist and
extremist tendencies. The political leadership assumed by Shiite
religious scholars in Iran and Lebanon has transformed Shiite Islam
from a marginalized minority to a highly politicized avant garde of
Muslim presence, revitalized the practice and causes of political
Islam in its struggle for legitimacy and authority, and reshaped
the politics of the Middle East and the globe in its image.
Utilizing approaches from social theory, history, theology, and
literary criticism, the book presents these leaderships as
pragmatic, interpretative entities with the potential to form
fruitful relationships between Shiite leadership and the non-Shiite
world.
Taking a theologically oriented method for engaging with historical
and cultural phenomena, this book explores the challenge, offered
by revolutionary Shi'i theology in Iran, to Western conventions on
theology, revolution and religion's role in the creation of
identity. Offering a stringent critique of current literature on
political Islam and on Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution, the author
suggests that current literature fails to perceive and engage with
the revolution and its thought as religious phenomena. Grounded in
the experience of unconditional faith in God, Shi'i thinkers
recognize a distinction between the human and the divine. Concerned
with the challenge of constructing a virtuous society, these
thinkers pose a model of authority and morality based on mediation,
interpretation and participation in the experience of faith. Ori
Goldberg considers this interpretative model utilizing a broad
array of theoretical tools, most notably critical theologies drawn
from Jewish and Christian thought. He draws on a close reading of
several texts written by prominent Iranian Shi'i thinkers between
1940 and 2000, most of which are translated into English for the
first time, to reveal a vibrant, complex discourse. Presenting a
new interfaith perspective on a subject usually considered beyond
the scope of such research, this book will be an important
reference for scholars of Iranian studies, political Islam,
theology and cultural studies.
Religious faith has been gaining in reach and influence throughout
global politics over the last three decades, most prominently in
the Middle East, and theologies of this nature are based on the
understanding that faith in God is to be based, primarily and
predominantly, on the realness of God's presence. The West,
accustomed to its own discussion on religion and politics
emphasising democracy and individual freedoms, has been at a loss
to explain and engage these rising religious polities. Through an
innovative approach to the role of faith in politics, Faith and
Politics in Iran, Israel, and the Islamic State considers political
theologies of the real formulated during the twentieth century and
proposes that, while religion in the West has been committed to
absolutist vision, these theologies have drawn their strength from
a commitment to their concrete, divinely infused reality.
In this book, Shaul Mishal and Ori Goldberg explore the ways in
which Shiite leaderships in Iran and Lebanon approach themselves
and their world. Contrary to the violent and radical image of
religious leaderships in the Islamic Republic of Iran and Lebanese
Hizballah, the political vision and practice of these leaderships
view the world as a middle ground, shying away from absolutist and
extremist tendencies. The political leadership assumed by Shiite
religious scholars in Iran and Lebanon has transformed Shiite Islam
from a marginalized minority to a highly politicized avant garde of
Muslim presence, revitalized the practice and causes of political
Islam in its struggle for legitimacy and authority, and reshaped
the politics of the Middle East and the globe in its image.
Utilizing approaches from social theory, history, theology, and
literary criticism, the book presents these leaderships as
pragmatic, interpretative entities with the potential to form
fruitful relationships between Shiite leadership and the non-Shiite
world.
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