Social Histories of Iran: Modernism and Marginality in the Middle East

IF 0.3 Q4 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR
Kaveh Ehsani
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Cronin challenges two prevailing trends in the historiography of Iran. The first is the nation-state-centered approach that frames Iranian history as exceptional and unique to its national territory and populations. The second are the top-down state and elite-centered frameworks that overlook the role of the subaltern classes and ordinary people in shaping this contested modernity. Instead, Cronin aims to unpack the agency and historical experiences of the poor, women, political activists, prostitutes, bandits, criminals, slaves, provincial and rural populations, workers, and small traders in navigating often violent historical transformations that shaped contemporary Iran and the Middle East. Throughout the book, Cronin links the national with the regional and the global to show how Iranian history has always been an integral part of currents beyond its national borders.Each chapter covers a different topic, ranging from the paradoxical role of secular revolutionary forces in the 1979 “Islamic” Revolution to the moral economy of food and the politicization of hunger under the Qajar dynasty; the political and social dynamics and public perceptions of criminality and the dangerous classes amid rapid social change, slavery, and abolitionism in Iran and the wider Middle East; and anti-veiling campaigns and the politics of dress. The great strength of the book is its comparative approach, placing Iran's modern social history within the larger context of Middle East and global histories by challenging “the routine fracture that separates the analysis of the national history of Iran from its global context” (2). “Methodological nationalism,” as the author calls it, is a significant issue that plagues academic studies and popular perceptions of Iran, as Cronin demonstrates in the first chapter (and only previously unpublished case study). The 1979 revolution was one of the largest social revolutions of the modern era. It was the result of a sustained and largely nonviolent mass movement against the monarchy that eventually triumphed through popular protests and general strikes. Yet instead of garnering intellectual and political curiosity like other events of this magnitude, it is now treated as an aberration following the violent ascendence of Khomeinist and radical Islamists. Rather than treating the Iranian Revolution as a historical anomaly, Cronin situates it at the juncture of two key moments in modern global history. First, she examines the tail end of the radical 1960s and 1970s, when “the educational revolution” produced a new global professional middle class of youth from middle- and working-class backgrounds who used university campuses to mobilize against conventional elites (including established parties on the left), social inequality, and imperialist wars. Second, she explores the advent of neoliberalism beginning in the 1980s—the reactionary countermovement that promoted the cults of individualism and market fundamentalism, epitomized by the elections of Reagan and Thatcher. Cronin shows how militant Iranian students and radical activists, at home and abroad, were shaped by these two historical moments. Like their counterparts elsewhere in the world, they organized against established political parties and elites, including the Communist Tudeh Party and the authoritarian Pahlavi regime. In solidarity with and inspired by other radical movements of the 1960s and 1970s—Latin American Guevarism, the Palestine Liberation Organization, and so on—significant segments of Iran's radicalized and increasingly educated youth gravitated toward armed struggle as “both strategy and tactic” (42). This was not limited to Marxists and secular radicals, since ideologically rival youths of Islamist and religious persuasion also became inspired by this uncompromising vanguardist militancy, forgoing advocating for social change through grassroots organizing among workers and other social groups to build a sustained and organized mass movement. Although numerically insignificant, these children of the “Red 1970s” had an outsized ideological effect on political culture when the revolution occurred.Cronin's analysis in this opening chapter is granular and fascinating. She pulls together transnational events, actors, and ideological trends to resurrect the habitus in which the Iranian Revolution unfolded. Yet I found myself in slight disagreement. For example, the ideological influence of Maoism and especially China's Cultural Revolution in Iran, but also in 1968 Paris and worldwide, are slightly caricatured or overlooked. Also, it's puzzling that the shock waves of concurring major events in Iran's neighboring countries—the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the coup d’états in neighboring Turkey, Iraq, and Pakistan—are left out, especially since these events undermined or discredited (Afghanistan) democrats and the secular left and strengthened radical Islamists. Ironically, given the topic of the book, Cronin's focusing on global ideological movements and her highlighting of the influence of organized vanguard groups and militant activists also tends to discount or overlook the agency of other, far more numerous, subaltern groups and classes in the revolution. What motivated these millions of ordinary participants to risk all and partake in social upheavals even when they did not belong to any of these ideological currents? The voices and experiences of these key actors remain unexplored. Could the chaotic dynamics of these unorganized masses have shaped the politics of vanguard elites, revolutionary Marxists, and militant Islamists, as much as the other way around? Addressing this question requires incorporating the findings of other sources excluded here—ethnographies, local social histories, oral histories, documentaries, memoirs, local press, and so on. By focusing on the global and national role of organized groups of vanguard leaders, the opening chapter overlooks the local and variegated personal experiences of the ordinary subalterns who also made this history. That said, Cronin's insights are a major contribution that reintegrate the study of the Iranian Revolution into a global history.Briefly, the essay titled “Modernism and the Politics of Dress: Anti-Veiling Campaigns in the Muslim World” is a brilliant comparative study of the politics of gender and social class that I regularly assign to my Middle East courses. Another noteworthy chapter examines banditry, smuggling, prostitution, and criminality in Iran and the wider Middle East in the context of violent and radical social disruptions that accompanied modernization and nation-state building. Other chapters examine slavery, abolitionism, and bread riots and food politics. I found one, “Noble Robbers, Avengers and Entrepreneurs: Eric Hobsbawm and Banditry in Iran, the Middle East, and North Africa,” not as substantive.Overall, this is a noteworthy work. The writing is clear, and the histories are told in a compelling manner. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This book, by a leading social historian of modern Iran, is not an integrated and chronological general history but, as the title suggests, a collection of six case studies, five of which were previously published as articles and book chapters. Together they offer provocative insights into how modernity and social and political marginality were experienced in Iran and the wider Middle East. They cover the formative late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, during which Iran experienced major social and political upheavals of global significance, including two major revolutions, military invasions and occupations by imperial powers, the emergence of oil capitalism, the Cold War, major land reforms, and the forced de-veiling of women by the Pahlavis and their re-veiling in the Islamic Republic, among others. Cronin challenges two prevailing trends in the historiography of Iran. The first is the nation-state-centered approach that frames Iranian history as exceptional and unique to its national territory and populations. The second are the top-down state and elite-centered frameworks that overlook the role of the subaltern classes and ordinary people in shaping this contested modernity. Instead, Cronin aims to unpack the agency and historical experiences of the poor, women, political activists, prostitutes, bandits, criminals, slaves, provincial and rural populations, workers, and small traders in navigating often violent historical transformations that shaped contemporary Iran and the Middle East. Throughout the book, Cronin links the national with the regional and the global to show how Iranian history has always been an integral part of currents beyond its national borders.Each chapter covers a different topic, ranging from the paradoxical role of secular revolutionary forces in the 1979 “Islamic” Revolution to the moral economy of food and the politicization of hunger under the Qajar dynasty; the political and social dynamics and public perceptions of criminality and the dangerous classes amid rapid social change, slavery, and abolitionism in Iran and the wider Middle East; and anti-veiling campaigns and the politics of dress. The great strength of the book is its comparative approach, placing Iran's modern social history within the larger context of Middle East and global histories by challenging “the routine fracture that separates the analysis of the national history of Iran from its global context” (2). “Methodological nationalism,” as the author calls it, is a significant issue that plagues academic studies and popular perceptions of Iran, as Cronin demonstrates in the first chapter (and only previously unpublished case study). The 1979 revolution was one of the largest social revolutions of the modern era. It was the result of a sustained and largely nonviolent mass movement against the monarchy that eventually triumphed through popular protests and general strikes. Yet instead of garnering intellectual and political curiosity like other events of this magnitude, it is now treated as an aberration following the violent ascendence of Khomeinist and radical Islamists. Rather than treating the Iranian Revolution as a historical anomaly, Cronin situates it at the juncture of two key moments in modern global history. First, she examines the tail end of the radical 1960s and 1970s, when “the educational revolution” produced a new global professional middle class of youth from middle- and working-class backgrounds who used university campuses to mobilize against conventional elites (including established parties on the left), social inequality, and imperialist wars. Second, she explores the advent of neoliberalism beginning in the 1980s—the reactionary countermovement that promoted the cults of individualism and market fundamentalism, epitomized by the elections of Reagan and Thatcher. Cronin shows how militant Iranian students and radical activists, at home and abroad, were shaped by these two historical moments. Like their counterparts elsewhere in the world, they organized against established political parties and elites, including the Communist Tudeh Party and the authoritarian Pahlavi regime. In solidarity with and inspired by other radical movements of the 1960s and 1970s—Latin American Guevarism, the Palestine Liberation Organization, and so on—significant segments of Iran's radicalized and increasingly educated youth gravitated toward armed struggle as “both strategy and tactic” (42). This was not limited to Marxists and secular radicals, since ideologically rival youths of Islamist and religious persuasion also became inspired by this uncompromising vanguardist militancy, forgoing advocating for social change through grassroots organizing among workers and other social groups to build a sustained and organized mass movement. Although numerically insignificant, these children of the “Red 1970s” had an outsized ideological effect on political culture when the revolution occurred.Cronin's analysis in this opening chapter is granular and fascinating. She pulls together transnational events, actors, and ideological trends to resurrect the habitus in which the Iranian Revolution unfolded. Yet I found myself in slight disagreement. For example, the ideological influence of Maoism and especially China's Cultural Revolution in Iran, but also in 1968 Paris and worldwide, are slightly caricatured or overlooked. Also, it's puzzling that the shock waves of concurring major events in Iran's neighboring countries—the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the coup d’états in neighboring Turkey, Iraq, and Pakistan—are left out, especially since these events undermined or discredited (Afghanistan) democrats and the secular left and strengthened radical Islamists. Ironically, given the topic of the book, Cronin's focusing on global ideological movements and her highlighting of the influence of organized vanguard groups and militant activists also tends to discount or overlook the agency of other, far more numerous, subaltern groups and classes in the revolution. What motivated these millions of ordinary participants to risk all and partake in social upheavals even when they did not belong to any of these ideological currents? The voices and experiences of these key actors remain unexplored. Could the chaotic dynamics of these unorganized masses have shaped the politics of vanguard elites, revolutionary Marxists, and militant Islamists, as much as the other way around? Addressing this question requires incorporating the findings of other sources excluded here—ethnographies, local social histories, oral histories, documentaries, memoirs, local press, and so on. By focusing on the global and national role of organized groups of vanguard leaders, the opening chapter overlooks the local and variegated personal experiences of the ordinary subalterns who also made this history. That said, Cronin's insights are a major contribution that reintegrate the study of the Iranian Revolution into a global history.Briefly, the essay titled “Modernism and the Politics of Dress: Anti-Veiling Campaigns in the Muslim World” is a brilliant comparative study of the politics of gender and social class that I regularly assign to my Middle East courses. Another noteworthy chapter examines banditry, smuggling, prostitution, and criminality in Iran and the wider Middle East in the context of violent and radical social disruptions that accompanied modernization and nation-state building. Other chapters examine slavery, abolitionism, and bread riots and food politics. I found one, “Noble Robbers, Avengers and Entrepreneurs: Eric Hobsbawm and Banditry in Iran, the Middle East, and North Africa,” not as substantive.Overall, this is a noteworthy work. The writing is clear, and the histories are told in a compelling manner. This book is a significant contribution to the comparative literature on subaltern social histories of modernity in Iran and elsewhere.
伊朗社会历史:中东的现代主义与边缘性
克罗宁在开篇一章中的分析细致入微,引人入胜。她将跨国事件、演员和意识形态趋势结合在一起,重现了伊朗革命展开时的情景。然而,我发现自己有点不同意。例如,毛主义的意识形态影响,尤其是中国在伊朗的文化大革命,以及1968年在巴黎和全世界的文化大革命,都被略微讽刺或忽视了。此外,令人费解的是,伊朗邻国同时发生的重大事件——苏联入侵阿富汗和邻国土耳其、伊拉克和巴基斯坦的政变——的冲击波却被遗漏了,尤其是这些事件削弱了(阿富汗)民主人士和世俗左派的信誉,并加强了激进的伊斯兰主义者。具有讽刺意味的是,鉴于本书的主题,克罗宁对全球意识形态运动的关注,以及她对有组织的先锋团体和激进分子的影响的强调,也往往低估或忽视了革命中其他数量多得多的次等群体和阶级的作用。是什么促使这些数以百万计的普通参与者冒着一切风险参与社会动荡,即使他们不属于任何这些意识形态流派?这些关键角色的声音和经历仍未得到探索。这些无组织群众的混乱动态是否会影响先锋队精英、革命马克思主义者和激进伊斯兰主义者的政治,或者反过来?要解决这个问题,需要结合这里排除的其他来源的发现——民族志、当地社会历史、口述历史、纪录片、回忆录、当地媒体等等。通过关注有组织的先锋领袖群体的全球和国家角色,开篇章节忽略了同样创造这段历史的普通次等人的地方和多样化的个人经历。也就是说,克罗宁的见解是将伊朗革命研究重新整合到全球历史中的重大贡献。简而言之,这篇题为《现代主义与服装政治:穆斯林世界的反面纱运动》的文章是我在中东课程中经常布置的一篇关于性别和社会阶级政治的杰出比较研究。另一个值得注意的章节考察了伴随着现代化和民族国家建设的暴力和激进的社会破坏的背景下,伊朗和更广泛的中东地区的土匪、走私、卖淫和犯罪行为。其他章节考察了奴隶制、废奴主义、面包暴动和食品政治。我发现其中一篇名为《高贵的强盗、复仇者和企业家:埃里克·霍布斯鲍姆与伊朗、中东和北非的土匪行为》,内容并不丰富。总的来说,这是一个值得注意的工作。文字清晰,历史以令人信服的方式讲述。这本书是对伊朗和其他地方的现代社会历史的比较文学的重大贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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