Descripción del título
Contesting the Jurists' Aut...
In this thesis I suggest that attending to the rhetorical construction of Iranian dissident arguments allows entry to a complex world of continually reconstructed and resituated Iranian imaginaries of Islam. Here, I engage with the work of two contemporary dissident Iranian authors, Abdolkarim Soroush (b. 1945 CE) and Mohammad Mujtahid Shabestari (b. 1936), and demonstrate the ways in which their critiques of Islamic juridical authority and Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) themselves draw upon long-standing debates within Islamic tradition. I argue that, while these authors do in fact reimagine and reform elements of Islamic tradition in order to argue for a rationalist democratic politics, that reformation cannot be understood merely as the imposition of Euro-American models of secularism, but rather prioritizes a refigured imaginary of Islamic worship linked to inner states and self-conscious embodied practice
Monografía
monografia Rebiun35656653 https://catalogo.rebiun.org/rebiun/record/Rebiun35656653 190626s2009 xx om 000 0 eng d 950540326 https://cdr.lib.unc.edu/concern/dissertations/9z9030893 https://cdr.lib.unc.edu/record/uuid:bb0266bc-f167-4356-b44c-2e9b5c5174fa NOC NOC dc Contesting the Jurists' Authority: Muslim Critique and Counter-Traditions in the Islamic Republic of Iran electronic resource].] 2009-05 Thesis / Dissertation ETD Open access content. Open access content star In this thesis I suggest that attending to the rhetorical construction of Iranian dissident arguments allows entry to a complex world of continually reconstructed and resituated Iranian imaginaries of Islam. Here, I engage with the work of two contemporary dissident Iranian authors, Abdolkarim Soroush (b. 1945 CE) and Mohammad Mujtahid Shabestari (b. 1936), and demonstrate the ways in which their critiques of Islamic juridical authority and Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) themselves draw upon long-standing debates within Islamic tradition. I argue that, while these authors do in fact reimagine and reform elements of Islamic tradition in order to argue for a rationalist democratic politics, that reformation cannot be understood merely as the imposition of Euro-American models of secularism, but rather prioritizes a refigured imaginary of Islamic worship linked to inner states and self-conscious embodied practice http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0 English College of Arts and Sciences Department of Religious Studies Masters Thesis College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Religious Studies. ctb Ernst, Carl. ctb Foody, Kathleen. cre