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5 - Rethinking the Islamic Republic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 May 2024

Mehran Kamrava
Affiliation:
Georgetown University in Qatar
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Summary

The reformist religious intellectuals of the 1990s and the 2000s sought to articulate a new jurisprudence that drew inspiration from dynamic, reason-centered ijtihad. The characteristics of the new, reconstituted fiqh were meant to include a comprehensive research program of reformism, deconstruction of commonplace understanding of religion and religion hermeneutic, and reexamining religious experiences and expectations. It was also meant to historicize religion and reimagine jurisprudence through the application of secular and scientific tools and methods. The project’s spectacular failure, slowly made clear about a decade after its zenith in the mid-2000s, owed much to the right’s merciless and multipronged onslaught. But that failure – more accurately, its violent obstruction – did not come until after the project of deconstructing hermeneutics and ijtihad had been taken to their logical extension, namely efforts to construct a sustained theory of Islamic democracy.

Type
Chapter
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How Islam Rules in Iran
Theology and Theocracy in the Islamic Republic
, pp. 142 - 201
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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