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ID127931
Title ProperAmong the believers
Other Title Informationwhat Jalal Al-e Ahmad thought Iranian Islamism could learn from zionism
LanguageENG
AuthorAvishai, Bernard ;  Ahmad, Jalal Al-e
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In the early 1960s, Jalal Al-e Ahmad was one of Iran's leading literary celebrities, a writer whose works deeply impressed the dissident clerics who would go on to found and lead the Islamic Republic. Born to a devout family in Tehran in 1923, a boy in the bazaar, Al-e Ahmad had drifted away from the faith and eventually earned a degree in Persian literature. He flirted with the communist Tudeh Party of Iran in the 1940s but broke with it for being too pro-Soviet; then, he helped found (and later left) a workers' party that supported Mohammad Mosaddeq, who was elected prime minister of Iran in 1951. After the 1953 coup that toppled Mosaddeq, Al-e Ahmad succumbed to pressure from the shah's regime and renounced politics entirely, publishing a letter "repenting" for his prior participation. He returned to his roots and seemed to find his vocation, becoming famous throughout Iran as a novelist, essayist, and underground polemicist, especially for his 1962 book Gharbzadegi, or "West-struck-ness" (published in English as Occidentosis or sometimes Westoxification).
`In' analytical NoteForeign Affairs Vol. 93, No.2; Mar-Apr 2014: p.115-124
Journal SourceForeign Affairs Vol. 93, No.2; Mar-Apr 2014: p.115-124
Key WordsJalal Al-e Ahmad ;  Tehran ;  Iranian Islamism ;  Zionism ;  Consumer Capitalism


 
 
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