Iranian Intellectuals and the West: The Tormented Triumph of Nativism

Ön Kapak
Syracuse University Press, 1 Ara 1996 - 320 sayfa
Mehrzad Boroujerdi challenges the way many Americans perceive present-day Iran as well as how Iranians view the West. He examines the works of thinkers seminal in defining modern Iran (virtually unknown in the U.S.) and concludes the Islam was not the primary source of their inspiration. Their efforts to forge an "authentic" national identity lay at the heart of Iranian thought. These intellectuals (both religious and secular) appropriated Islam as the vehicle through which they could most effectively challenge or accommodate modernity and Westernization. Through such a fitting appropriation, Boroujerdi asserts, could modern Iranian thinkers lay the foundation for a nativist vision of an unsullied culture, seemingly free of Western influence. Drawing on the works of Michel Foucault and Edward Said, this book explores how Iranians use their own misunderstandings about the West to form their own identity and, in return, how Westerners describe Iran in negative terms to help them reaffirm the superiority of their own culture. Boroujerdi also argues that Iranian intellectuals have been deeply indebted to Western thought, which has served as the cultural reference through which they continue to struggle with issues of identity and selfhood.

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İçindekiler

Otherness Orientalism Orientalism in Reverse and Nativism
1
The Othering of a Rentier State
20
The Othering of the West
52
The Clerical Subculture
77
Lay Religious Intellectuals
99
Academic Nativism
131
Debates in the Postrevolutionary Era
156
Epilogue
176
Index
241
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