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The Shi'is of Iraq (2nd ed.)

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The Shi'is of Iraq provides a comprehensive history of Iraq's majority group and its turbulent relations with the ruling Sunni minority.

Yitzhak Nakash challenges the widely held belief that Shi'i society and politics in Iraq are a reflection of Iranian Shi'ism, pointing to the strong Arab attributes of Iraqi Shi'ism.

He contends that behind the power struggle in Iraq between Arab Sunnis and Shi'is there exist two sectarian groups that are quite similar.

The tension fueling the sectarian problem between Sunnis and Shi'is is political rather than ethnic or cultural, and it reflects the competition of the two groups over the right to rule and to define the meaning of nationalism in Iraq.

A new introduction brings this book into the new century and illuminates the role that Shi'is could play in postwar Iraq.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691115753 / 9780691115757
Paperback / softback
16/02/2003
United States
English
xxii, 312 p. : map
24 cm
research & professional /academic/professional/technical Learn More
Previous ed.: 1994.
The most authoritative account we have on the Shi'a of Iraq... Nakash's book provides a powerful corrective to earlier books on Iraq which have been battered by recent events. No reader who goes through Nakash's work will fail to be moved by the historical vistas he opens up. -- Fouad Ajami, School of Advanced International Studies, The Johns Hopkins University
The most authoritative account we have on the Shi'a of Iraq... Nakash's book provides a powerful corrective to earlier books on Iraq which have been battered by recent events. No reader who goes through Nakash's work will fail to be moved by the historical vistas he opens up. -- Fouad Ajami, School of Advanced International Studies, The Johns Hopkins University 1FBQ Iraq, HBJF1 Middle Eastern history, HRH Islam, HRQM Contemporary non-Christian & para-Christian cults & sects, JPA Political science & theory