Reza Khan, Iran's penultimate Shah, was forced to abdicate in 1941. Among the many measures of social 'reform' which he had decreed was the abolition of the veil. In 1941, according to Ahmad, a sceptical university professor in Roy Mottahedeh's book The Mantle of the Prophet, 'women such as my aunt, who hadn't left her house since Reza Shah's forced unveiling of women, felt as if they had been released from prison, because they could appear in the streets in their chadors.' In these words it is possible to read a warning addressed to those with an unambiguous image of Iran. Cultural and intellectual ambiguity in Iranian history is the thread that draws together Mottahedeh's extraordinary book. It is extraordinary because it disobeys, in a very effective manner, the rules according to which most soi-disant historians guide their writings. The book is a tapestry of interwoven essays. It is a work of biography, of philosophy, of literary criticism, and of religious and educational history. Mottahedeh is attempting to set the revolution of 1979 in its historical context.
LRB 3 April 1986 | PDF Download
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