The Evolution of Educational Discourse in Iran (1906–1941): From the Project of National Salvation to Authoritarian Modernization

Authors

    Zahra Soleymani Ph.D. student, Department of Islamic History, Ab.C., Islamic Azad University, Abhar, Iran
    Javad Sakha * Associate Professor, Department of Management Accounting, Ab.C., Islamic Azad University, Abhar, Iran javad.sakha@iau.ac.ir
    Masoud Mohammadi Associate Professor, Department of History, Farhangian University, Tehran, Iran
    Morteza Shahsavar Associate Professor, Department of History, University of Tabriz, Tabriz, Iran

Keywords:

educational discourse, Constitutional Revolution, Reza Shah, project of national salvation, modernization from above, nationalization of education

Abstract

The aim of this article is to examine the evolution of educational discourse in Iran from the Constitutional Revolution to the end of Reza Shah Pahlavi’s reign (1906–1941). The central question is why and how education, during this period, was transformed from a “project of national salvation” with a social and citizen-centered character into an instrument of “authoritarian modernization” and centralized state-building. Using a historical-analytical method and focusing on the discourse of the press, educational documents, and the memoirs of political elites, the article explores this dual process. Drawing on primary sources, including the press of the Constitutional era, memoirs of statesmen, and educational documents, as well as a theoretical framework based on reform from above and directive reformism, the study shows that during the Constitutional period, education was regarded as a prerequisite for legalism and nation-building, a social ideal, and a popular demand. However, during the Reza Shah period, with the establishment of the first Pahlavi monarchy (1925–1941), this discourse underwent a fundamental transformation. Reza Shah’s powerful and centralized state implemented the Constitutional ideal of universal education through the Compulsory Education Law, standardized curricula, and institutions such as the University of Tehran and teacher-training colleges. Yet this realization came at a heavy cost. During the reign of Reza Shah Pahlavi, the same ideal, under the logic of a centralized and ideological state, led to compulsory education, a uniform curriculum, and ancient-oriented nationalism. The findings indicate that although educational modernization during this period achieved significant structural and quantitative accomplishments, its top-down and non-participatory nature caused it to fail in fostering critical consciousness, educational justice, and sustainable social acceptance. The article concludes that the dual legacy of this transition—success in constructing modern institutional forms versus failure in democratic educational content—cast a long shadow over Iran’s educational system for decades.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

1. Kasravi Tabrizi A. History of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution. Tehran: Amirkabir University Publications; 1984.

2. Adamiyat F. Amir Kabir and Iran. 4th ed. Tehran: Kharazmi Publications; 1975.

3. Dowlatabadi Y. Hayat-e Yahya. Tehran: Ferdowsi; 1983.

4. Ringer M. Education, Religion, and the Discourse of Cultural Reform in Qajar Iran. Haqiqatkhah M, editor. Tehran: Qoqnoos; 2021.

5. Abrahamian E. Iran Between Two Revolutions. 29th ed. Golmohammadi A, Fattahi ME, editors. Tehran: Ney; 2020.

6. Katouzian MAH. State and Society in Iran. Afshar H, editor. Tehran: Markaz Publishing; 2012.

7. Azghandi A. History of Political and Social Developments in Iran. Tehran: SAMT Publications; 2011.

8. Atabaki T. Authoritarian Modernization. Haqiqatkhah M, editor. Tehran: Qoqnoos; 2006.

9. Tavakoli-Targhi M. Indigenous Modernity and Rethinking History. Tehran: Pardis Danesh; 2016.

10. Mahboubi Ardakani H. History of the Institutions of Modern Civilization in Iran. Tehran: University of Tehran Press; 1991.

11. Roshdieh Fa-D. Biography of the Elder of Education, Roshdieh. Tehran: Hirmand; 1991.

12. Torabi Farsani S. Documents on Girls' Schools from the Constitutional Era to the Pahlavi Era. Tehran: National Library and Archives of Iran; 1999.

13. Mostofi A. The Story of My Life. Tehran: Zavvar; 1992.

14. Najmabadi A. Women with Mustaches and Men without Beards. Kamel A, editor. Tehran: Tisa; 2024.

15. Samei Yazdi NS. The Course of Developments in Iranian Education during the Pahlavi Era: Islamic Azad University, Central Tehran Branch.

16. Basiratmanesh H. The Ulama and Reza Shah's Regime. Tehran: Orouj Printing and Publishing Institute; 2007.

17. Dadresi N, Mousavi S. Educational pathology of the institution of education in the first Pahlavi era. Iranian Political Sociology Monthly. 2021;2:310-27.

18. Ashouri D. We and Modernity. Tehran: Serat; 2018.

Downloads

Published

2027-05-01

Submitted

2026-04-08

Revised

2026-06-27

Accepted

2026-07-04

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Soleymani, Z. ., Sakha, J., Mohammadi, M. ., & Shahsavar, M. . (2027). The Evolution of Educational Discourse in Iran (1906–1941): From the Project of National Salvation to Authoritarian Modernization. Journal of Historical Research, Law and Policy, 1-9. https://jhrlp.com/index.php/jhrlp/article/view/381

Similar Articles

1-10 of 191

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.