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Shi'i Reformation in Iran
A01=Ali Rahnema
Agnostics
Ahmad Kasravi
Ahmad Shah Qajar
Author_Ali Rahnema
Ayatollah Khomeyni
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Category=QRP
clerical
clerical authority critique
Clerical Establishment
Common Language
compilation
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establishment
hadith
Ibn Abdul Wahhab
Ibn Hanbal
ideas
Imam Hoseyn
Iranian religious history
islamic
Islamic reform movements
jurist
Mainstream Clerics
Man Of The Cloth
Middle Eastern religious studies
Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahhab
Muslim World
Polytheistic Act
Priestly Institutions
Qur'anic primacy debate
Religious Quietism
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Reza Shah
Reza Shah's Reign
Reza Shah’s Reign
Righteous Acts
Seminary School
shah
Shi'i doctrinal reform discourse
Socio-economic Development
Spiritual Clerics
superstitious
Superstitious Ideas
Sweet Melons
twentieth century theology
Young Man
Product details
- ISBN 9781472434166
- Weight: 521g
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 18 Mar 2016
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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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.
Ali Rahnema teaches Economics and Middle East and Islamic Studies and is Director of the Master of Arts program in Middle East and Islamic Studies at the American University of Paris. His many publications include: Behind the 1953 Coup in Iran: Thugs, Turncoats, Soldiers, and Spooks (2015); Superstition as Ideology in Iranian Politics, From Majlesi to Ahmadinejad (2011); An Islamic Utopian: A Political Biography of Ali Shari’ati (1998, 2000, 2013); Pioneers of Islamic Revival (1994, 2006); and Islamic Economic Systems (with Farhad Nomani, 1994).
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