Document Type : Research
Authors
1 PhD in Political Science (Political Sociology Tendency), Department of Political Science, Faculty of Theology, Law and Political Science, Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran.
2 Associate Professor of Political Science, Faculty of Law and Political Science, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran
3 Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Faculty of Theology, Law and Political Science, Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran
Abstract
Understanding the nature of government and society has been one of the most important areas of study of political sociologists, especially analysts of the Constitutional Revolution and the Islamic Revolution in Iran. The book of the displacement of the two revolutions seeks to answer the question of why in the traditional and backward Iranian society of the Qajar period, modern revolution and in the newly-established Iran, the Pahlavi period has occurred a religious revolution. The author puts forward the idea of a Migdal network, arguing that in a 300-year-old process of Shiite religion, there has been a turning point in esoteric and mysterious thinking of the social sphere that has reached the last stage of socialization with the Islamic Revolution. In this paper, we will attempt to review the book of the movement of two revolutions from three perspectives of form, content, and method. The results show that in spite of some criticisms, it has a desirable form, and efforts to present a native model focusing on culture and society, and in particular the Shiite religion and clergy as the subject of analysis, are the most important strengths of this work. In contrast, the author’s intellectual attachment to empathy with liberal democracy and modernization, along with the lack of a coherent method, has diminished the quality of content and method.
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