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Description
Ali Shariati (1933-1977) is best known as a “revolutionary theorist,” closely connected to Iran’s Islamic Revolution of 1979. While his social, political, and religious thought was deeply influential in those turbulent times, Shariati was much more than a political ideologue. A scholar of religion, philosophy, and sociology, Shariati was fluent both in Western and Islamic thought, which allowed him to create some of the most penetrating “critical” thought in the 20th century, applicable to both the West and the dār al-Islām. While he remains controversial inside his home country, his influence has grown beyond its borders. Today, contemporary theorists are returning to Shariati’s written works, seeing his voluminous writing as a precursor to the decolonization movement, which seeks to emancipate the non-Western world from the vestiges of Western colonial domination. In many ways, Shariati laid the foundation for such emancipatory work through his own struggle against the Shah of Iran and the clerical establishment that supported the status quo. This collection of essays returns to a variety of the Shariati’s core concepts, as it seeks to interrogate them, revitalize them, and engage our own age of strife through these Shariatian perspectives.
Listen to Dr. Byrd and Dr. Miri talk about Ali Shariati and Critical Social Theory on Emancypacje (Emancipations) podcast: Liberation Theologies Episode 1.
Paperback. 245 Pages.
Published: February, 2025
ISBN: 979-8992019407
Also available through:
Amazon (US): Ali Shariati: Critical Social Theory and the Struggle for Decolonization
Lulu (US & International): Ali Shariati: Critical Social Theory and the Struggle for Decolonization
Additional information
| Weight | 14.6 oz |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 9 × 6 × 1 in |
| Table of Contents | Notes of Contributors Preface: Chapter 1: Ali Shariati and the Theology of Islamic Socialism: Towards a Post-Metaphysical Alternative Chapters 2: Ali Shariati: Re-imagining the Critique in Critical Theory Chapter 3: Ali Shariati: Liberation Theology, Social Justice & Humanism Chapter 4: Ali Shariati and Postcolonial Contributions Chapter 5: An Overview of Shariati and the Issue of "Women" Chapter 6: Similarities and Differences between Sharitati's Thoughts and Fundamentalism Chapter 7: Curriculum for Revolution: Ali Shariati's Practical Plan and the Radical Politics of Knowledge Chapter 8: Ali Shariati, or the Intellectual in Pursuit of Justice Chapter 9: Shariati: Religion vs. Religion Chapter 10: Ali Shariati, Sociology and Public Policy in the Building of Society and the Nation Chapter 11: Shariati and Govermentality Chapter 12: Shariati's View on Self, Other, Enemy, Decolonization, and Post-Colonization Manifested in Iraq Chapter 13: Cultivating the Revolutionary Self: A Contribution to a Concept Chapter 14: The Dialectic of Agency and the Structure in Explaining Civilizational Decline and Iran's Backwardness Compared to the West: Ali Shariati's Perspectives Chapter 15: A Critical Review of Critic's Misconceptions about Shariati Index |









