TY - JOUR
T1 - A return to which self? Ali Shari'ati and Frantz Fanon on the political ethics of insurrectionary violence
AU - Davari, Arash
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - This essay considers the overlap between Ali Shari'ati's ethical reflections and his discussion of insurrectionary violence. Davari argues that the earlier lectures discussing bāzgasht be khishtan (a return to self) formed the conceptual foundation for his advocacy of shahādat (martyrdom) as a model of self-formation. These intellectual tendencies were rooted in a tradition of anticolonial and insurgent political thought, exemplified in Shari'ati's case by an engagement with the writings of Frantz Fanon. Shari'ati's borrowing of Fanon's notions of return and decolonial violence involved alterations within a shared framework. Most notably, Shari'ati emphasized the prospect of a return to a religious self, redefined as political ethics. Whereas Fanon privileged an embodied experience of racialization as the most fundamental constraining and enabling factor in the realization of a new humanism, Shari'ati's presentation of the "new man" as shahid involved a hermeneutic relationship with a collective self imagined across historical time. In Shari'ati's hands, Fanon's eschewal of history became an engagement with historical memory in the present tense. In the process, the body was reimagined as that which dies, its physical death marking the future where Fanon's new man was said to be found. The shahid's choosing to die-as opposed to the colonized's need to kill the colonizer-led to the revision of two central conclusions pertaining to the process of decolonization: the discussion of means as ends, and the critique of a hierarchical relationship between revolutionary leaders and the led.
AB - This essay considers the overlap between Ali Shari'ati's ethical reflections and his discussion of insurrectionary violence. Davari argues that the earlier lectures discussing bāzgasht be khishtan (a return to self) formed the conceptual foundation for his advocacy of shahādat (martyrdom) as a model of self-formation. These intellectual tendencies were rooted in a tradition of anticolonial and insurgent political thought, exemplified in Shari'ati's case by an engagement with the writings of Frantz Fanon. Shari'ati's borrowing of Fanon's notions of return and decolonial violence involved alterations within a shared framework. Most notably, Shari'ati emphasized the prospect of a return to a religious self, redefined as political ethics. Whereas Fanon privileged an embodied experience of racialization as the most fundamental constraining and enabling factor in the realization of a new humanism, Shari'ati's presentation of the "new man" as shahid involved a hermeneutic relationship with a collective self imagined across historical time. In Shari'ati's hands, Fanon's eschewal of history became an engagement with historical memory in the present tense. In the process, the body was reimagined as that which dies, its physical death marking the future where Fanon's new man was said to be found. The shahid's choosing to die-as opposed to the colonized's need to kill the colonizer-led to the revision of two central conclusions pertaining to the process of decolonization: the discussion of means as ends, and the critique of a hierarchical relationship between revolutionary leaders and the led.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84900493839
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84900493839#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1215/1089201X-2648587
DO - 10.1215/1089201X-2648587
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84900493839
SN - 1089-201X
VL - 34
SP - 86
EP - 105
JO - Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East
JF - Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East
IS - 1
ER -