Shiism and Politics in the Middle East

Shiism and Politics in the Middle East

by Laurence Louer
Shiism and Politics in the Middle East

Shiism and Politics in the Middle East

by Laurence Louer

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Overview

In this timely book, completed before the current outbreak of unrest in Bahrain that has formed part of the Arab Spring, Laurence Louer explains, the background of the Bahraini conflict in the context of the wider issue of Shiism as a political force in the Arab Middle East, amongst other issues relating to the role of Shiite Islamist movements in regional politics. Her study shows how Bahrain's troubles are a phenomenon based on local perceptions of injustice rather than on the foreign policy of Shiite Iran. More generally, the book shows that, though Iran's Islamic Revolution had an electrifying effect on Shiite movements in Lebanon, Iraq, the Gulf and Saudi Arabia, local political imperatives have in the end been the crucial factor in the direction they have taken. In addition, the overwhelming influence of the Shiite clerical institution has been diminished by the rise to prominence of lay activists within the Shiite movements across the Middle East and the emergence of Shiite anti-clericalism. This book contributes to dispelling the myth of the determining power of Iran in the politics of Iraq, Bahrain and other Arab states with significant Shiite populations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780197644164
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 12/01/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Laurence Louer is Research Fellow at CERI/SciencesPo in Paris. She has served as a permanent consultant for the Policy Planning Department of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs (CAP ) since 2004 and as co-editor-in-chief of Critique internationale since 2006. Her research focuses on the politics of identity and ethnicity in the Middle East. She is the author of two other Hurst titles: Transnational Shia Politics: Political and Religious Networks in the Gulf (2008) and To Be An Arab In Israel (2007).

Table of Contents

Glossary Introduction C. 1 The Clergy C. 2 Transnational Network C. 3 Islamic Republic of Iran C. 4 Post Saddam Era Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index

What People are Saying About This

Faisal Devji

This short and elegantly written book manages the extraordinarily difficult feat of presenting the reader with a lucid introduction to Shiism in the Middle East that is at the same time full of penetrating insights. There is nothing quite like it in print, and I should state immediately that the book richly deserves translation and publication in English. Avoiding a prose that is either excessively general or too detailed, it will just as easily serve the needs of undergraduate teaching as of policymaking, and even offers ideas for specialists, particularly in the concluding chapter. Dealing with Shiism in the Middle East as a whole, rather than following the standard procedure of splitting it between Iranian and Arab versions, Louer's book looks at the sect's political transformation after the Islamic Revolution and the fall of Baathist Iraq, paying particular attention to the changing role of the clergy, the rise of lay authorities, and transnational patterns of religious thought and practice that cannot be divided by neatly marked national categories. All of this leads to the apparently paradoxical conclusion that the success of Shii politics results in the slow marginalization of the clerical class and the rise to prominence of lay figures who are in many ways far more "religious" than the divines, especially in their concern with messianic and other eschatological themes. While Louer is surely correct in seeing the emergence of a lay leadership as an example of the way in which Shiism is taking on an increasingly Sunni countenance, the interest in eschatology is surely more attuned to movements among the Christian laity (Catholic and Protestant), though there is probably no direct causal relationship to be found between them. While her focus on the Middle East quite legitimately allows Louer to ignore the vast Shii populations of South Asia, it would have been interesting to learn something about the way in which they are tied into the world of Middle Eastern religious and political authority, not least as significant sources of funding for important figures like the Ayatullah Sistani.

Faisal Devji, Reader in South Asian History, St Antony's College, University of Oxford and author of, inter alia, Landscapes of the Jihad: Militancy, Morality, Modernity, and The Terrorist in Search of Humanity (2010).

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