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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian religions > Islam
One of the world's leading authorities on the Islamic world answers the many troubling questions raised in the wake of the September 11 attack
Cosmopolitanism, as an intellectual and political project, has
failed. The portrayal of human rights, especially European, as
evidence of cosmopolitanism in practice is misguided. Cosmopolitan
theorists point to the rise of claims-making to the European Court
of Human Rights (ECtHR) among Europe's Muslims to protect their
right to religious freedom, mainly concerning the hijab, as
evidence of cosmopolitan justice. However, the outcomes of such
claims-making show that far from signifying a cosmopolitan moment,
European human rights law has failed Europe's Muslims. Human
Rights, Islam and the Failure of Cosmopolitanism provides an
empirical examination of claims-making and government policy in
Western Europe focusing mainly on developments in the UK, Germany,
France, Italy and the Netherlands. A consideration of public
debates and European law of conduct in the public sphere shows that
cosmopolitan optimism has misjudged the magnitude of the impact
claims-making among Europe's Muslims. To overcome this cul-de-sac,
European Muslims should turn to a new 'politics of rights' to
pursue their right to religious expression. This book is a
theoretically challenging re-evaluation of cosmopolitan arguments
through a rigorous discussion of rights-making claims by Europe's
Muslims to the European Court of Human Rights. It combines
sociological and legal case analysis which advances understanding
of one of the most pressing topical issues of the day.
Church History reveals that Christianity has its roots in Palestine
during the first century and was spread throughout the
Mediterranean countries by the Apostles. However, despite sharing
the same ancestry, Muslims and Christians have been living in a
challenging symbiotic co-existence for more than fourteen centuries
in many parts of South-Eastern Europe and the Middle East. This
book analyses contemporary Christian-Muslim relations in the
traditional lands of Orthodoxy and Islam. In particular, it
examines the development of Eastern Orthodox ecclesiological
thinking on Muslim-Christian relations and religious minorities in
the context of modern Greece and Turkey. Greece, where the
prevailing religion is Eastern Orthodoxy, accommodates an official
recognised Muslim minority based in Western Thrace as well as other
Muslim populations located at major Greek urban centres and the
islands of the Aegean Sea. On the other hand, Turkey, where the
Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople is based, is a Muslim
country which accommodates within its borders an official
recognised Greek Orthodox Minority. The book then suggests ways in
which to overcome the difficulties that Muslim and Christian
communities are still facing with the Turkish and Greek States.
Finally, it proposes that the positive aspects of the coexistence
between Muslims and Christians in Western Thrace and Istanbul might
constitute an original model that should be adopted in other EU and
Middle East countries, where challenges and obstacles between
Muslim and Christian communities still persist. This book offers a
distinct and useful contribution to the ever popular subject of
Christian-Muslim relations, especially in South-East Europe and the
Middle East. It will be a key resource for students and scholars of
Religious Studies and Middle Eastern Studies.
The holy book of Islam, the Koran as a book is the result of: 1.
revelations given to Muhammad in the period 610- 632 (Muhammad's
death) 2. writing down of these revelations by people around
Muhammad in a period probably starting some years after 610, and
ending a couple of years after 632 3. compiling of these writings
stretching from mid-630s and perhaps until mid-650s 4. vowelling
and dotting of the text (ancient Arabic was written without dots,
leaving some letters look identical, and without vowels, which can
make two different words look identical). Old Koran Essential to
the reading of the Koran are the interpretations, which are still
conducted, but which were more normal and accepted in the first
centuries of Islam. As the Koran has a structure and a language, as
well as allusions, which often are difficult for the normal Muslim
to understand, a whole science were built around the comprehension
of the Koran. The early Muslims studied history, language and
nature science in an effort of understanding the Koran better. The
product is surprisingly well accepted by the whole Muslim society,
and no Muslim child or adult of today, studying the Koran, does
this without help from the interpretations built on the early
science of the Koran.
How did the Victorians perceive Muslims in the British Empire and
beyond? How were these perceptions propagated by historians and
scholars, poets, dramatists and fiction writers of the period? For
the first time, Shahin Kuli Khan Khattak brings to life Victorian
Britain's conceptions and misconceptions of the Muslim World using
a thorough investigation of varied cultural sources of the period.
She discovers the prevailing representation of Muslims and Islam in
the two major spheres of British influence - India and the Ottoman
Empire - was reinforced by reoccurring themes: through literature
and entertainment the public saw 'the Mahomedan' as the 'noble
savage', a perception reinforced through travel writing and fiction
of the 'exotic east' and the 'Arabian Nights'. "Islam and the
Victorians" will be an important contribution to understanding the
apprehensions and misapprehensions about Islam in the nineteenth
century, providing a fascinating historical backdrop to many of
today's concerns.
The war in the Middle East is marked by a lack of cultural
knowledge on the part of the western forces, and this book deals
with another, widely ignored element of Islam-the role of dreams in
everyday life. The practice of using night dreams to make important
life decisions can be traced to Middle Eastern dream traditions and
practices that preceded the emergence of Islam. In this study, the
author explores some key aspects of Islamic dream theory and
interpretation as well as the role and significance of night dreams
for contemporary Muslims. In his analysis of the Islamic debates
surrounding the role of "true" dreams in historical and
contemporary Islamic prophecy, the author specifically addresses
the significance of Al-Qaeda and Taliban dream practices and
ideology. Dreams of "heaven," for example, are often instrumental
in determining Jihadist suicidal action, and "heavenly" dreams are
also evidenced within other contemporary human conflicts such as
Israel-Palestine and Kosovo-Serbia. By exploring patterns of dreams
within this context, a cross-cultural, psychological, and
experiential understanding of the role and significance of such
contemporary critical political and personal imagery can be
achieved.
This book cuts across important debates in cultural studies,
literary criticism, politics, sociology, and anthropology. Meyda
Yegenoglu brings together different theoretical strands in the
debates regarding immigration, from Jacques Lacan's psychoanalytic
understanding of the subject formation, to Zygmunt Bauman's notion
of the stranger, to Etienne Balibar's reading of Hanna Arendt's
notion of 'right to have rights," and to Antonio Negri's concept of
the constituent and constitutive power.
This in-depth study examines the relation between legal theory
(usul al-fiqh) and speculative theology ('ilm al-kalam). It
compares the legal theory of four classical jurists who belonged to
the same school of law, the Shafi'i school, yet followed three
different theological traditions. The aim of this comparison is to
understand to what extent, and in what way, the theology of each
jurist shaped his choices in legal theory.
Islam is often seen as a religious tradition in which hell does not
play a particularly prominent role. This volume challenges this
hackneyed view. Locating Hell in Islamic Traditions is the first
book-length analytic study of the Muslim hell. It maps out a broad
spectrum of Islamic attitudes toward hell, from the Quranic
vision(s) of hell to the pious cultivation of the fear of the
afterlife, theological speculations, metaphorical and psychological
understandings, and the modern transformations of hell.
Contributors: Frederick Colby, Daniel de Smet, Christiane Gruber,
Jon Hoover, Mohammad Hassan Khalil, Christian Lange, Christopher
Melchert, Simon O'Meara, Samuela Pagani, Tommaso Tesei, Roberto
Tottoli, Wim Raven, and Richard van Leeuwen.
In this new interpretation of the modernization and secularization
of Turkey, Andrew Davison demonstrates the usefulness of
hermeneutics in political analysis. A hermeneutic approach, he
argues, illuminates the complex relations between religion and
politics in post-Ottoman Turkey and, more broadly, between politics
and matters of culture, tradition, national identity, and
conscience in the modern world. Led by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, a
modernist Turkish elite in the 1920s wrested political power from
an empire in which Islam had exercised great political, social, and
cultural power. Ataturk instituted policies designed to end Islamic
power by secularizing politics and the state. Through the lens of
hermeneutics, this book examines the ideas and policies of the
secularizers and those who contested the process. Davison
reinterprets the founding principles and practices of a modern,
secular Turkey and closely reexamines the crucial ideas of the
Turkish nationalist thinker Ziya Goekalp, who laid the conceptual
groundwork for Turkey's Westernization experience. The application
of hermeneutics, the author finds, remedies the methodological
shortcomings of Western political analysts and provides a better
understanding of the processes of secularization in Turkey as well
as elsewhere in the modern world.
This volume presents a critical edition of the Judaeo-Arabic
translation and commentary on the book of Esther by Saadia Gaon
(882-942). This edition, accompanied by an introduction and
extensively annotated English translation, affords access to the
first-known personalized, rationalistic Jewish commentary on this
biblical book. Saadia innovatively organizes the biblical
narrative-and his commentary thereon-according to seven
"guidelines" that provide a practical blueprint by which Israel can
live as an abased people under Gentile dominion. Saadia's
prodigious acumen and sense of communal solicitude find vivid
expression throughout his commentary in his carefully-defined
structural and linguistic analyses, his elucidative references to a
broad range of contemporary socio-religious and vocational realia,
his anti-Karaite polemics, and his attention to various issues,
both psychological and practical, attending Jewish-Gentile
conviviality in a 10th-century Islamicate milieu.
All four of the bombers involved in 7/7, the deadly attack on
London's transport system in July 2005, were aged 30 or under. The
spectre of extremist Islam looms large and Muslim youth in the UK
are increasingly linked to radical Islamic movements. A clear,
balanced examination of this complex issue is long overdue. Philip
Lewis sets out to address this by looking at the lives and beliefs
of young Muslims aged 18 to 30, against a backdrop of the problems
any migrant community face. Beginning with an overview of British
Muslim communities, he goes on to explore the nature of the
intergenerational gap in the Muslim community, showing how normal
tensions are exaggerated as children are educated in a language and
culture different to that of their parents. Patriarchal 'clan
politics' and a breakdown in communication between young Muslims
and traditional Muslim leaders are dispossessing Islamic youth,
leading a small but significant minority to turn to radical groups
for somewhere to belong and something to believe in. Lewis
concludes by identifying a generational shift from 'clan politics'
to what he calls a 'new professionalism' and demonstrates how new
organizations and networks of Muslim thinkers are springing up all
the time - allowing young Muslims to find positive identities and
outlets for their concerns and energies.
The seven volumes in this set, originally published between 1923
and 1987, explore the influence of Islam on law, politics, science,
and development in the Muslim world. This set will be of interest
to students of both Islamic and Middle Eastern studies.
Contrary to the monolithic impression left by postcolonial theories
of Orientalism, the book makes the case that Orientals did not
exist solely to be gazed at. Hermes shows that there was no
shortage of medieval Muslims who cast curious eyes towards the
European Other and that more than a handful of them were interested
in Europe.
We can classify the whole of mankind into two main groups: one
group would include those people who sincerely think about others
in the same way as they think about themselves; the other group
would include those people who place importance only on their own
status, and are always striving to serve their own selfish ends.
What is language? How did it originate and how does it work? What
is its relation to thought and, beyond thought, to reality?
Questions like these have been at the center of lively debate ever
since the rise of scholarly activities in the Islamic world during
the 8th/9th century. However, in contrast to contemporary
philosophy, they were not tackled by scholars adhering to only one
specific discipline. Rather, they were addressed across multiple
fields and domains, no less by linguists, legal theorists, and
theologians than by Aristotelian philosophers. In response to the
different challenges faced by these disciplines, highly
sophisticated and more specialized areas emerged, comparable to
what nowadays would be referred to as semantics, pragmatics, and
hermeneutics, to name but a few - fields of research that are
pursued to this day and still flourish in some of the traditional
schools. Philosophy of language, thus, has been a major theme
throughout Islamic intellectual culture in general; a theme which,
probably due to its trans-disciplinary nature, has largely been
neglected by modern research. This book brings together for the
first time experts from the various fields involved, in order to
explore the riches of this tradition and make them accessible to a
broader public interested both in philosophy and the history of
ideas more generally.
"Islam in the Eastern African Novel engages the novels of three
important eastern African novelists--Nuruddin Farah, Abdulrazak
Gurnah, and M. G. Vassanji--by centering Islam as an interpretive
lens and critical framework. Mirmotahari argues that recognizing
the centrality of Islam in the fictional works of these three
novelists has important consequences for the theoretical and
conceptual conversations that characterize the study of African
literature. The overdue and sustained attention to Islam in these
works complicates the narrative of coloniality, the nature of the
nation and the nation-state, the experience of diaspora and exile,
the meaning of indigenaity, and even the form and history of the
novel itself"--
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