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OverviewIn October 1978, a day that started like any other for Ali Mirsepassi full of anti-Shah protests ended in near death.He was stabbed and dumped in a ditch on the outskirts of Tehran for having spoken against Khomeini. In this account, Mirsepassi digs up this and other painful memories to ask: How did the Iranian revolutionary movementcome to this? How did a people united in solidarity and struggle end up so divided? In this first-hand account, Mirsepassi deftly weaves together his insights as a sociologist of Iran with his memories of provincial life and radical activism in 1960s and 1970s Iran. Attentive to the everyday struggles Iranians faced as they searched for ways to learn about and make history despite state surveillance and censorship, The Loneliest Revolution revisits questions of leftist failure and Islamist victory and ultimately asks us all to probe the memories, personal and collective, that we leave unspoken. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Ali MirsepassiPublisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press Dimensions: Width: 13.00cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 19.60cm Weight: 0.318kg ISBN: 9781399511421ISBN 10: 1399511424 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 31 March 2023 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsAs a young man growing up in Iran, Ali Mirsepassi took part in the revolutionary movement that led to the overthrow of the Shah and the creation of the Islamic Republic. He also became one of the Revolution's early victims. In this searching memoir, Mirsepassi reflects on his country's convulsive history and his own place within it: as a student, as an activist, and finally as an exiled intellectual. It is a credit to Mirsepassi's intellectual rigor -- and his own sense of ghorbat, or strangeness -- that he writes about his youthful self as if he were writing about another person. The truth about himself, and about the Revolution itself -- an epochal struggle for freedom that resulted in its negation -- is elusive, and in some way unknowable. Where other memoirs of the Revolution have sought to justify (or apologize for) their authors' choices and to indict their adversaries, The Loneliest Revolution seeks instead to understand, and to 'think the unthought, ' with a contemplative humility that is full of anguish but remarkably free of bitterness. The result is a daring and powerful work of memoir and intellectual history, and one that is all the more urgent for coinciding with Iran's ongoing struggle for 'woman, life, freedom.' As an unprecedented movement for freedom and women's rights unfolds across Iran, Mirsepassi's memoir, The Loneliest Revolution, reaches us. Both highly personal and analytical, Mirsepassi offers an intimate window onto the Iranian revolution just when we need to be thinking about it the most. But more importantly, The Loneliest Revolution prompts us, the readers, to question how we define ourselves in relation to the world. The Loneliest Revolution beautifully knits the intimate to the political and the human to the social. It is essential reading not just for students of modern Iran and revolutions but anyone looking to probe these perennial questions. In this wonderful book, Mirsepassi leverages touching personal recollections--of parents, a history-telling grandmother, an upbringing across small-town Iran, and student days in revolutionary Tehran--to reflect on questions of public life such as: What does ghorbat mean? Why did world politics matter to Iranians in the 1960s-80s? And how did leftist/Islamic identities interrelate at the time? A fascinating kaleidoscope of a memoir. The prose of our historiography is changing. Solid scholars with an impeccable academic background are turning to the more publicly accessible genre of memoir, and Ali Mirsepassi's exceptionally insightful new book is a vintage of such fruitful prose. Deeply erudite, and yet intimate, endearing, and irresistibly readable, The Loneliest Revolution charts a whole new way of writing history. A bravura performance! """The prose of our historiography is changing. Solid scholars with an impeccable academic background are turning to the more publicly accessible genre of memoir, and Ali Mirsepassi's exceptionally insightful new book is a vintage of such fruitful prose. Deeply erudite, and yet intimate, endearing, and irresistibly readable, The Loneliest Revolution charts a whole new way of writing history. A bravura performance! ?"" -Hamid Dabashi, Columbia University" Author InformationAli Mirsepassi is Albert Gallatin Research Excellence Professor of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, New York University. He is Director of Iranian Studies Initiative at NYU. Mirsepassi was a 2007-2009 Carnegie Scholar and is the co-editor, with Arshin Adib-Moghadam, of The Global Middle East, a book series published by the Cambridge University Press. His recent books include, The Discovery of Iran: Taghi Arani, a Radical Cosmopolitan (Stanford University Press, Fall 2021); and Iran's Quiet Revolution: The Downfall of the Pahlavi State (October 2019, Cambridge University Press). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |