Theocratic Secularism

Religion and Government in Shi'i Thought

Naser Ghobadzadeh author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:8th Feb '23

Should be back in stock very soon

Theocratic Secularism cover

For more than forty years, there has been a religious government in Iran that claims to be rooted in shi'i political theology. In this book, Naser Ghobadzadeh intends to show that this reading of shi'i political theology is a fundamental deviation from orthodox shi'ism. The principle of theocracy is one of the most fundamental principles of the shi'i orthodox belief system, but its realization in practice depends on the return of the Twelfth Imam. Until that day, the institution of government and political leadership falls outside the scope of the authority of religious leaders. Naser Ghobadzadeh shows that governmental-shi'ism is less than half a century old and that its formation was not the product of a transformation in orthodox shi'i political theology. Rather, governmental-shi'ism was born in the political arena and has been able to survive because it profits from government resources. Coining the term 'theocratic secularism', this book argues for the re-instatement of a form of political secularism in Iran.

Naser Ghobadzadeh's reputation as one of the world's leading young scholars of Shiʼi Islam is reaffirmed by this enlightening and enlivening book. It shows with great clarity how the Iranian government's reigning doctrine of wilayat-i faqih was born of a revolutionary power grab that spurned the wisdom of ancient Shiʼi jurists—scholars such as Shaykh alMufid and al-Sharif al-Murtada who taught that people of faith who believe in the hidden Imam are obliged to shun involvement in earthly government and resist its corrupting and potentially evil effects. * John Keane, Professor of Politics, University of Sydney *
This is a superb contribution to transformative scholarship in the Islamic Imami Shiʼa tradition, insightful and innovative yet authoritative, respectful, and well documented. * Abdullahi Ahmed An-Naim, author of Islam and the Secular State *
In Theocratic Secularism, Ghobadzadeh proposes that Twelver Shiʼism has occasioned a religious justification for political secularism. In doing so he details a history of Shiʼism from its formative period to the present, placing what he calls 'governmental Shiʼism' against 'Shiʼi orthodoxy.' One need not be convinced of his argument to see a solid scholar at work trying to question the religious foundation of tyrannical rule of a clerical class. * Hamid Dabashi, Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature, Columbia University *
Ghobadzadeh has meticulously probed the history of Shiʼite tradition to underscore the idea that 'theocratic secularism' is embedded in the Twelver Shiʼi theology. The book traverses painstakingly through Iranian and Western sources to demonstrate that Islamic government is a modern construct, and it is inconceivable for it to exist legitimately during the occultation of the Twelfth Imam. * Abdulaziz Sachedina, Professor of Islamic Studies, George Mason University *

ISBN: 9780197606797

Dimensions: 157mm x 226mm x 41mm

Weight: 590g

320 pages