The Iran–Iraq war was a defining period in the formation of the Islamic Republic of Iran and its upstart military: the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC). In this impressive monograph, Annie Tracy Samuel dives deeply into the IRGC’s own historiography and explores how the organization understands the conflict and how it wants the war to be remembered in Iran’s political consciousness. More broadly, it is a book about war and memory, and of the politics and meaning-making of institutional histories.'
Afshon Ostovar - Naval Postgraduate School
'The IRGC’s role in the Iran–Iraq War has not terminated with the end of war-related activities, but continued with a mission of writing the history of the ‘holy defense.’ Considering the critical roles of the war and the IRGC in state-building of the Islamic Republican regime, Tracy Samuel’s study provides an impressive account of the IRGC’s framing of the long-lasting war.'
Bayram Sinkaya - Ankara Yıldırım Beyazıt University
'This probing analysis makes for compelling reading. … Highly recommended.'
R. P. Matthee
Source: Choice
‘… a useful contribution to the literature.’
Ray Takeyh
Source: Survival
‘[T]he book is highly valuable as it introduces the wealth of primary sources created by the IRGC over the decades, which are seldom examined in historical studies.’
Mateo Mohammad Farzaneh
‘[The] book is required reading for students and specialists of Iranian and Middle Eastern history and politics and, more generally, armed conflict, social revolution, and collective memory. It makes a significant scholarly contribution by delving into untapped sources and by offering unique insights into the IRGC, the Iran-Iraq War, and the Islamic Republic. Finally, the book raises stimulating and engaging questions about military historiography as a national project in Iran and beyond. These questions will surely prompt path-breaking research within the disciplines of history, area studies, and comparative politics in the future.’
Eric Lob
Source: Iranian Studies
‘… a valuable monograph not only for students of the contemporary Middle East, Iran, and the IRGC, but for anyone with an interest in historiography, narrative construction, and military history, at large. … Tracy Samuel’s book challenges [the traditional] narrative through a meticulous study of the IRGC’s war historiography. … [it] will be an undeniable resource for future research … In addition to laying the grounds for an engaged study of sources produced in Iran, The Unfinished History of the Iran-Iraq War offers an important analytical path forward.’
Maryam Alemzadeh - International Journal of Middle East Studies