Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:840Hits:19992329Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID186980
Title ProperMahdavī Society
Other Title Informationthe Rise of Millennialism in Iran as the Cultural Outcome of Social Movements (2000–2016)
LanguageENG
AuthorTeimouri, Amirhossein
Summary / Abstract (Note)This study asks questions about the understudied cultural, especially discursive, consequences of social movements at large, and rightist movements in particular. Focusing on the discursive repertoire of the Islamist rightist movement in Iran (known as principlism), I demonstrate that in response to the liberal Reform Movement (1997–2005), the principlist groups in Iran weaponized a millennial language against liberal reformists beginning in the early 2000s. The institutionalization of the Islamist principlist movement in 2005 mainstreamed this politicized language, giving rise to a new cultural reform politics in the country known under Aḥmadīnizhād as the Mahdavī discourse (millennialism). That is, the Mahdavī discourse represented a new cultural reconfiguration, or “cultural engineering,” in state politics. However, the Green Movement of 2009 as well as the Arab uprisings divided the unified Mahdavī discourse within the principlist movement into divergent millennial discourses. Drawing on millennial-oriented news stories and events from the early 2000s until the rise of the self-identified Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, I highlight the millennial discourses, as well as the Islamist-centered cultural engineering project, as the discursive outcomes of social movements.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle East Critique Vol. 31, No.2; 2022: p.125-145
Journal SourceMiddle East Critique Vol: 31 No 2
Key WordsIran ;  Millennialism ;  Mahmud Ahmadinizhad ;  Discursive Outcomes of Social Movements ;  Islamist Rightist Movement ;  Principlism


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text