- Our Stores
- University Avenue
- About
- The Move
- The Co-op Turns 50!
- Sale Books
- View all sale books
- Or browse by section:
- American History
- African History
- African-American History
- Anthologies
- Anthropology
- Art and Art History
- Cartography
- Chicago
- Cognitive Science
- Drama
- East Asian History
- Economics
- European History
- Foreign Language Reference and Instruction
- Graphica
- Humor
- Judaica
- Literary Criticism
- Literature
- Mathematics
- Native American Studies
- Poetry
- Psychology
- Science
- Sociology
- South Asian History
- Theology
- Travel
- Miscellaneous
- Coursebook Ordering
- U of C Coursebook Listings
- 57th Street Books
- The Newberry Library Bookstore
- Hours and Contact Information
- Maps and Directions
- University Avenue
- Co-op Membership
- Coursebooks
- Events
- The Front Table Blog
- New Titles
- Your Account
Answering Only to God: Faith and Freedom in Twenty-First-Century Iran (Paperback)
Email or call for price
Out of Print
Description
“Riveting . . . a side of Iran that is often misrepresented by the world’s media—[an] insightful, captivating book.” —San Francisco Chronicle
Taking the reader inside Iran’s key institutions, Geneive Abdo and Jonathan Lyons argue that the 1979 Iranian revolution, long viewed in the West as the pursuit of an imagined medieval Utopia, was in fact a political movement designed to modernize Islam. Twenty years later, a power struggle between conservative and reform elements provoked a clash that has destabilized the country and limited Iran’s ability to integrate with the world community.
Answering Only to God challenges the prevailing Western belief that the Islamic world is an undifferentiated mass of disaffected and dangerous fanatics or that a Western-style democracy will soon transform this ancient land of Shi’ite and Sufi tradition. Instead, the authors explore the controversial view that beyond their quarrel with the West, stemming from decades of exploitive foreign policies, the real struggle in Iran is between reformers and conservative mullahs.
About the Author
Geneive Abdo reported from Islamic countries for The Guardian and The Economist for over a decade. She is the author of No God But God, a correspondent in the Washington bureau of The Boston Globe, and a commentator on NPR and the BBC. Abdo was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University and a Guggenheim Fellow in 2001–2002. Jonathan Lyons served as the bureau chief of an international news agency in Iran and in Turkey. Before that, he covered the collapse of the Soviet Union. They both live in Washington, D.C.




