ABSTRACT

First published in 1998, Revolutionary Iran investigates two major political transformations in the modern history of Iran: the Constitutional Revolution of 1905-09 and the Islamic Revolution 1976-79 and their relation to the modernization of Iran in this century. It addresses a core question: Why did the clergy not take political power in the Constitutional Revolution when Iran was a traditional society and they played a key leadership role in the revolution; yet they succeeded in the more modern Iran of 1979.

Characterization of socio-economic relationships between the two major influential groups of civil society in Iran and their role in political transformation is considered central for answering such a question. The book deals with revolution in terms of relationships between civil society and state; which, it is argued, are central to analysing and understanding modern movements in Iran and other Islamic countries. The major contribution of the book can be summarized as follows:

  • It identifies a socio-political division of power and influence between state and civil society during a long period of Iran’s Islamic history as the key theoretical basis for understanding modern transformations of Iranian society. Such a division has, so far, been largely ignored.
  • It explores the clergy and bazaris as the social basis of civil society in Iran, and challenges Gellner’s viewpoint that an Islamic civil society is an impossibility.
  • It argues that the modernization of religion and the creation of modern political theories by the clergy were both crucial means for defeating a modern authoritarian state and seizing political power.
  • It identifies the main social group without whom the Islamic Revolution of Iran would not have achieved political victory, i.e., the dispossessed.
  • It presents a theoretical basis for analysing and understanding new Islamic movements in the Islamic world.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

part 1|107 pages

Civil Society in Iran, Foreign Impact, and the Constitutional Revolution

chapter 2|28 pages

Civil Society in Iran

chapter 4|17 pages

The Constitutional Revolution

chapter 5|19 pages

The Constitutionalism of the Ulama

part 2|96 pages

The New Monarchical Regime, Modernization, and the Islamic Revolution

chapter 6|15 pages

Iran Under the Pahlavis

chapter 7|18 pages

Modernization and the Ulama

chapter 8|24 pages

Iran on the Eve of the Islamic Revolution

chapter 9|36 pages

The Islamic Revolution

part 3|55 pages

Discussion and Conclusions