Iranian Intellectuals

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abdolkarim
Ante Mortem
Art Cinema
Assisted Reproduction
Ayatollah Muhammad Baqir Al Sadr
Ba Ba
Category=GTM
Category=JB
Category=JBCC9
Category=JBSA
Category=JP
cinema
cinema and social change
Crimson Gold
Daryush Shayegan
defence
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eq_society-politics
FIFF
Forugh Farrokhzad
Imam's Line
intellectual dissent in modern Iran
Iranian Cinema
Iranian Filmmakers
Iranian Intellectuals
Iranian political thought
islamic
Islamic Republic
kadivar
Middle Eastern studies
mohsen
Mohsen Kadivar
Persian cultural discourse
post-revolutionary society
Postrevolutionary Iran
religious
Religious Blogs
Religious Intellectuals
religious reform Iran
republic
Rumi's Verses
sacred
Sacred Defence
soroush
Surrogacy Arrangements
Vali Ye Faqih
Vice Versa
Vitro Fertilization
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415761956
  • Weight: 290g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Feb 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Previously published as a special issue of British Journal of Middle East Studies, this volume focuses on leading figures within Iran between 1997-2007 and their visions and works that are related to Iranian society.

A cross section of opinion is investigated, including the clerical (‘Ali Khameneh’i, Muhammad Khatami and Mohsen Kadivar), the dissident (Mohsen Makhmalbaf), and the poetic (Qaysar Aminpour) and cinematic. The past decade has been a traumatic one in Iran, and the essays in this volume testify to the vibrancy of the responses from Iranian thinkers. It may be a surprise to some observers that in some senses, ‘Ali Khameneh’i may be considered a ‘liberal’ whereas Muhammad Khatami’s own credentials as an advocate of rapprochement with the West needs to be qualified. Responses to Western culture continue to remain centre-stage, and this is also nowhere more apparent than in the complex relationship between the directors of Iranian films (perhaps Iran’s most celebrated export these days) and their audiences, both Iranian and Western. Despite some viewing Iran as a pariah state, it remains firmly connected to the West and to modern technology, typified in the practice of blogging that is enjoyed by so many Iranians, which has provided a new space for expression and thinking.

Lloyd Ridgeon is Senior Lecturer in Islamic and Persian Studies, Glasgow University.