Soldiers, shahs and subalterns in Iran : opposition, protest and revolt, 1921-1941

Bibliographic Information

Soldiers, shahs and subalterns in Iran : opposition, protest and revolt, 1921-1941

Stephanie Cronin

Palgrave Macmillan, 2010

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Note

Includes bibliographic references (p. 308-319) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Against conventional views of the unchallenged hegemony of a modernizing monarchy, this book argues that power was continuously contested in Riza Shah's Iran. Cronin excavates the successive challenges to Riza Shah's regime posed by a range of subaltern social groups and seeks to restore to these groups a sense of their historical agency.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Note on Transliteration PART I: FROM CONSTITUTIONALISM TO DICTATORSHIP Introduction: Contesting Power in the New Iran The Provincial Cities in Revolt (i): Colonel Pasyan and the Mashhad Rebellion, April-October 1921 The Provincial Cities in Revolt (ii): Major Abulqasim Lahuti and the Tabriz Insurrection of 1922 Popular Protest, Disorder and Riot: The Tehran Crowd and the Rise of Riza Khan, 1921-1925 PART II: THE NEW ORDER AND ITS OPPONENTS Reform from Above and Resistance from Below, 1927-1929 Popular Politics, the New State and The Birth of the Iranian Working Class: the 1929 Abadan Oil Refinery Strike The Politics of Radicalism within the Iranian Army: the Jahansuz Group of 1939 Conclusion Bibliography

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