Description
Mangol Bayat provides a much-needed detailed analysis of this historic episode, examining the national and international actors, and the political climate that engendered one crisis after another, ultimately leading to its fateful end. Bayat highlights the radical transformation of old institutions and the innovation of new ones, and most importantly, shows how this term provided a reasonably successful model of parliament imposing its will on the executive power that was primarily composed of old-guard, elite leaders. At the same time, Bayat challenges the traditional perception among scholars that reform attempts failed due to sectarian politics and ideological differences.
About the Author
Mangol Bayat has taught Middle Eastern history at several universities, including Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Iowa, and Harvard University. She is the author of Mysticism and Dissent: Socioreligious Thought in Qajar Iran and Iran's First Revolution: Shi'ism and the Constitutional Revolution of 1905-1909.
Reviews
This is one of the finest works on the Iranian Constitutional Revolution. . . . Bayat's meticulous scholarship has substantially raised the stakes in analyzing Iran's Constitutional Revolution.""-Mehrzad Boroujerdi, author of Postrevolutionary Iran: A Political Handbook
""Bayat's Iran's Experiment with Parliamentary Governance is simply magisterial in terms of sources, contexts, and analysis, but its importance goes beyond the hitherto neglected Second Majlis to re-center secular liberalism as the major thread in the whole of the Constitutional period, 1905-1911, with its preceding developments in the late 19th century and in Iran's subsequent history.""-G. R. Garthwaite, Dartmouth College
Book Information
ISBN 9780815636861
Author Mangol Bayat
Format Paperback
Page Count 520
Imprint Syracuse University Press
Publisher Syracuse University Press
Weight(grams) 885g