Description

Book Synopsis

Order out of Chaos explains why Iraqis turned to the mosque after state collapse. In 2003, the US-led invasion of Iraq destroyed the Bathist state. Despite this the citizens of Basra established predictable routines of daily life and social order as the familiar and customary structures of state-imposed order collapsed. What enabled individuals in Basra to work together to produce order amid anarchy? The answer: the Friday mosque.

A week after the regime fell, Shii imams introduced Friday congregational prayers and associated sermons for the first time in most places since the 1950s. These sermons facilitated the spread of common knowledge and coordination, both locally and nationally, and contributed to the emergence of a relatively cohesive imagined community of Iraqi Shia that came to dominate Iraq''s political order.

Combining rational choice approaches, ethnographic understanding, and GIS analysis, David Siddhartha Patel reveals the interconnec

Table of Contents

1. Order, Authority, and Identity
2. The Sanctions-Era Roots of Postinvasion Developments
3. Collapse
4. The Emergence of Local Orders
5. The Geography of Order
6. Ayatollahs' Networks and National Authority
7. The Limits of Sunni Religious Authority
8. Beyond Basra and Beyond Sermons

Order out of Chaos

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    A Hardback by David Siddhartha Patel

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      Publisher: Cornell University Press
      Publication Date: 15/12/2022
      ISBN13: 9781501715419, 978-1501715419
      ISBN10: 1501715410

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Order out of Chaos explains why Iraqis turned to the mosque after state collapse. In 2003, the US-led invasion of Iraq destroyed the Bathist state. Despite this the citizens of Basra established predictable routines of daily life and social order as the familiar and customary structures of state-imposed order collapsed. What enabled individuals in Basra to work together to produce order amid anarchy? The answer: the Friday mosque.

      A week after the regime fell, Shii imams introduced Friday congregational prayers and associated sermons for the first time in most places since the 1950s. These sermons facilitated the spread of common knowledge and coordination, both locally and nationally, and contributed to the emergence of a relatively cohesive imagined community of Iraqi Shia that came to dominate Iraq''s political order.

      Combining rational choice approaches, ethnographic understanding, and GIS analysis, David Siddhartha Patel reveals the interconnec

      Table of Contents

      1. Order, Authority, and Identity
      2. The Sanctions-Era Roots of Postinvasion Developments
      3. Collapse
      4. The Emergence of Local Orders
      5. The Geography of Order
      6. Ayatollahs' Networks and National Authority
      7. The Limits of Sunni Religious Authority
      8. Beyond Basra and Beyond Sermons

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