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Jahanbegloo, Ramin. Mapping the Role of Intellectuals in Iranian Modern and Contemporary History [[electronic resource].]. — Lanham: Lexington Books, 2020. — 1 online resource (347 p.). — Description based upon print version of record. — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/2709101.pdf>.

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12/19/2020

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This book analyzes the role of intellectuals as the prime mediators between the forces of tradition and modernity in twentieth century and twenty-first century Iran.

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  • Cover
  • Mapping the Role of Intellectuals in Iranian Modern and Contemporary History
  • Mapping the Role of Intellectuals in Iranian Modern and Contemporary History
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
    • Note
  • Part I Iranian Intellectuals, Nationalism, and State: From Qajar to Early Pahlavi
  • Chapter 1
  • Amir Kabir
    • Introduction
    • Historical Context of Iran in the Nineteenth Century
    • An Atypical Path of a Young Self-Taught and Ambitious Politician
    • Three Political Missions Abroad
    • At the Summit of Power
    • Three Years of Reforms
    • First Iranian Institution of Modern Education
    • The Minorities and Repression of Bab’s Movement
    • The Downfall of Mirza Taqi Khan Amir Kabir
    • Amir Kabir’s Heritage
    • Secularization of the Iranian Society
    • Conclusion
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 2
  • Crafting Iranian National Imaginary
    • Introduction
    • The Idea of Cosmopolitan Nationalism
    • The Iranian Interwar Experience (1919–1934)
    • Iranians in Interwar Berlin
    • The Ruşeni (Barkın) Affairs
    • Arani and the Question of Azerbaijan
    • Cosmopolitanism and Care of the Nation
    • Language against Lived Experience
    • Conclusion
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 3
  • British Whiggism and the Iranian Enlightenment in the Nineteenth Century
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Part II Iranian Intellectuals: Between Traditional Values and Modern State
  • Chapter 4
  • Third-Worldist Iranian Intellectuals
    • Shariati and Ale-Ahmad’s Common Background
    • Westtoxication
    • The Role of the Clergy and the Intellectuals
    • Democracy
    • The Anti-Shah Stance of Shariati and Ale-Ahmad
    • Discourse on Authenticity: Ale-Ahmad and Shariati
    • Differences between Ale-Ahmad and Shariati
    • Conclusion
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 5
  • Sadeq Hedayat
    • Notes
  • Chapter 6
  • Rethinking the Legacy of Intellectual-Statesmen in Iran
    • Qajar Era
    • Intellectual-Statesmen of the Reza Shah Period
    • Mohammad Reza Shah Period
    • The Ethical Challenge
    • Appendix: Short Biographies of Intellectual-Statesmen
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Part III Women Intellectuals in Pre- and Postrevolutionary Iran
  • Chapter 7
  • Women’s Rights in Iran’s Experiment with Modernity
    • Introduction
    • Secular Intellectuals and Women’s Rights
    • Agents of Modernity
    • Under the Rule of the Ayatollahs
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 8
  • “And, Here I Am,” Forugh Farrokhzad and Modernity
    • Notes
  • Chapter 9
  • Simin Daneshvar
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Part IV Iranian Left: From Marxist Intellectualism to Revolutionary Romanticism
  • Chapter 10
  • The Perplexity of the Iranian Marxist Intellectuals in the 1960s and 1970s
    • Introduction
    • Post-coup Crisis and the Formation of the Development State
    • The Outcomes of the Governmental Reforms and the Perplexity of the New Marxists Intellectuals
    • Conclusion
    • Notes
  • Chapter 11
  • Intellectual Statesmen and the Making of Iran’s Illiberal Nation-State (1921–1926)
    • Introduction
    • Intellectuals, Liberalism, and Constitutionalism
    • Can Non-Persians and Other Subalterns Speak in Historiography?
    • Conclusion: All of Reza Shah’s Intellectual Statesmen
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 12
  • A Singular Intellectual
    • Becoming a Singular Revolutionary
    • Theoretical Legacy: Against the Leninist Grain
    • On the Ontology of Revolutionary Intellectuals
    • The Underground Scholar
    • Conclusions
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Part V Iranian Religious Thinkers: Intellectuals or Ideologues?
  • Chapter 13
  • Iranian Islamic Thinkers and Modernity
    • Jamal al-Din Afghani/Assadabadi (1839–1897)
    • Ali Shariati (1933–1977)
    • Ruhullah Khomeini (1902–1988)
    • Morteza Motahhari (1920–1979)
    • Abdulkarim Soroush (1945–)
    • Conclusion
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 14
  • From Nakhshab to Neo-Shariati
    • Introduction
    • The Neo-Shariati Discourse: Genealogy and Historical Origins
    • Neo-Shariati Discourse: A Progressive Post-Islamist Muslim Left?
    • Conclusions
    • Acknowledgment
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Chapter 15
  • The Neo-Mutazilites in Contemporary Iran
    • Introduction
    • The First- and Second-Generation Neo-Mutazilite Theologians
    • The New Thematics among the Iranian Neo-Mutazilites: Religion and Politics, Democracy and Its Compatibility with Islam, the Hermeneutics of the Koran
    • The Ideological Rupture between Neo-Mutazilites and Revolutionary Islamic Intellectuals
    • Distinguishing Features between the First- and Second-Generation Neo-Mutazilites: Gender, Apostasy, Homosexuality, the Right to Be a Nonbeliever
    • Conclusion
    • Notes
    • Bibliography
  • Index
  • About the Editor
  • About the Contributors

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