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MATTHIESEN, TOBY (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   095361


Hizbullah al-Hijaz: a history of the most radical Saudi Shi'a opposition group / Matthiesen, Toby   Journal Article
Matthiesen, Toby Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This article discusses the emergence, ideology, and activities of the Saudi Shi'a opposition group Hizbullah al-Hijaz and its clerical wing, the Tajamu' 'Ulama' al-Hijaz. The group has played a significant but little known role in Saudi-Iranian relations since 1987 following its creation as a rival to the other Saudi Shi'a opposition group, the Islamic Revolution Organization. Hizbullah al-Hijaz was pro-Iranian and followed the Marja'iyya of Ayatollahs Khomeini and Khamene'i. Although it officially denounced any engagement with the Saudi leadership, it profited from a general amnesty in 1993. After it was blamed for the Khobar Towers bombing in 1996, most of its members were arrested and its organization dismantled.
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2
ID:   118254


Saudi Spring?: the Shia protest movement in the Eastern province 2011-2012 / Matthiesen, Toby   Journal Article
Matthiesen, Toby Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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3
ID:   139898


Shi's historians in a Wahhabi state : identity entrepreneurs and the politics of local historiography in Saudi Arabia / Matthiesen, Toby   Article
Matthiesen, Toby Article
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Summary/Abstract This article analyzes how Saudi Shiʿi historians have adapted tools associated with nationalism to create distinct historical narratives for the Shiʿa of Eastern Arabia. State-sponsored narratives have either left out Shiʿi Muslims or cast them as unbelievers and alien to the Saudi body politic. In contrast, historical narratives written by Shiʿi authors emphasize the Shiʿa's long history of sedentarization, their cultural heritage, and their struggles against foreign occupation. The article is based on fieldwork in Saudi Arabia and a close reading of hundreds of articles and books on local history published mainly since the 1980s. Through the Saudi Shiʿi case, I show that “identity entrpreneurs,” or activists who create, politicize, and profit from identities to further political aims, understand local historiography to be crucial to their overall projects.
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