Payman

Payman (Persian: Promise) was a cultural and political magazine in Iran. It was one of the periodicals which was published and edited by Iranian religious reformist Ahmad Kasravi in the period 1933–1942.[1]

Payman
EditorReza Soltanzadeh
CategoriesCultural magazine
Political magazine
FrequencyMonthly
FounderAhmad Kasravi
Year founded1933
First issueDecember 1933
Final issue1942
CountryPahlavi Iran
LanguagePersian

History and profile

The first issue of Payman appeared in December 1933.[1][2] The title of the magazine was a reference to another magazine with the same name in which Ziya Gökalp, an Ottoman nationalist intellectual, published articles at the beginning of the 20th century.[3] Kasravi's close ally Reza Soltanzadeh was the editor of Payman.[4] Nearly all the articles published in the magazine were mostly written by Kasravi.[2] It was published on a monthly basis.[1] It became the official organ of the political party, Azadegan, in 1941 when Kasravi founded the party.[2]

In the first seven years the subtitle of Payman was gozaresh-e sharq va gharb (Persian: Account of East and West). Then it was changed to dar bareh-ye shenakhtan-e jahan (Persian: On Knowing the World) and gozaresh-e jahan (Persian: World Report).[5] Payman folded in 1942 and was succeeded by Parcham.[1][4]

Content

Kasravi's writings in Payman outlined his general ideology.[3] His articles mostly contained his critical approach towards the Europeanization of Iran and the alienation of Iranian people from their own customs and traditions.[6] Kasravi also criticized Iranian poets, Sufis and materialism in his writings.[6] Other topics which he attacked in the magazine included superstitions in Shiism and Islam.[4][6] His lecture delivered at the Literary Society was serialized in Payman in two parts.[7] After the publication of the first part Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Foroughi ordered the next issue of the magazine to be censored which would cover its second part.[7] Although the next issue was published, it did not feature the remaining part of Kasravi's lecture.[7] In addition, Payman featured a column on international politics.[5]

Legacy

A collection of Kasravi's writings published in Payman was printed as a book in 1965.[8]

References

  1. Minoo Ramyar (1969). Sayyed Ahmad Kasravi historian, language reformer and thinker (MA thesis). Durham University. pp. 20, 22–23.
  2. Lloyd Ridgeon (2006). Sufi castigator. Ahmad Kasravi and the Iranian mystical tradition. London: Routledge. p. 20. ISBN 9780415665131.
  3. Ervand Abrahamian (October 1973). "Kasravi: The Integrative Nationalist of Iran". Middle Eastern Studies. 9 (3): 279, 294. doi:10.1080/00263207308700249.
  4. Evan J. Siegel (2021). "Book review". Iranian Studies. 54 (1–2): 337–340. doi:10.1080/00210862.2019.1699232.
  5. Roxane Haag-Higuchi (1996). "A Topos and Its Dissolution: Japan in Some 20th-Century Iranian Texts". Iranian Studies. 29 (1–2): 79. doi:10.1080/00210869608701843.
  6. Mosa Zahed (2017). "The Evolution and Ascension of Iran's Terror Apparatus". In Paulo Casaca; Siegfried O. Wolf (eds.). Terrorism Revisited: Islamism, Political Violence and State-Sponsorship. Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing. p. 61. ISBN 978-3-319-55690-1.
  7. Mohammad Ali Jazayery (August 1981). "Ahmad Kasravi and the Controversy over Persian Poetry". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 13 (3): 313. doi:10.1017/S0020743800053447.
  8. M. Amini (May 2012). "Kasravi, Aḥmad. A Bibliographical Survey". Encyclopedia Iranica.
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