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Pink Nail Polish: A Story
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
Extract
Jalal Al-e Ahmad (1923-1969) is an author whose writings during a 25-year career would warrant attention in any consideration of literature and society in Iran. That he has assumed special significance in the post-Pahlavi era can be explained by his efforts in the 1960s, in Nikki Keddie's words, “to achieve a kind of return from secularism to what he understood to be the true, progressive Islam…Al-e Ahmad found cultural roots and ties to the Iranian people in Islam [and] defended Islam against the policy of Westernization at any price championed by the [Pahlavi] regime.” The lip service paid Al-e Ahmad in recent years by Iranian writers and other intellectuals, including the publication of a 30-page eulogistic tribute to him in the first issue of the Association of Writers of Iran's Nameh-ye Kanun-e Nevisandegan-e Iran (1979), is an indication of their awareness of his distinctive potential appeal in an Islamic republic.
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- Copyright © Association For Iranian Studies, Inc 1982
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1. Keddie, Nikki R., “Iran: Change in Islam; Islam and Change,” International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 11 (1980): 535.CrossRefGoogle Scholar Idem, Roots of Revolution (New Haven: Yale University, 1981), pp. 202–205.Google Scholar
2. Nameh-ye Kanun-e Nevisandegan-e Iran, no. 1 (Tehran: Agah, 1979), pp. 223–253.Google Scholar A similar tribute appeared in Arash 5, no. 6 (September/October 1981), pp. 47-98. Earlier there was a separate volume called Harfha'i darbareh-ye Jalal Al-e Ahmad: Mardi dar Keshakesh-e Tarikh-e Mo'aser (Tabriz: Kaveh, 1978), 126 pp.Google Scholar
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