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Mystical Islam and Cosmopolitanism in Contemporary German Literature - Openness to Alterity (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,229
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Mystical Islam and Cosmopolitanism in Contemporary German Literature - Openness to Alterity (Hardcover)
Series: Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Highlights the spirituality and cosmopolitanism of four
contemporary German Muslim writers, showing that they undermine the
"clash-of-civilizations" narrative and open up space for new ways
of coexisting. At a time when the place of Muslims in German
society is being disputed, this book explores how four contemporary
German writers of Muslim backgrounds - Zafer Senocak, SAID, Feridun
Zaimoglu, and Navid Kermani - point beyond identity politics and
suggest new ways of thinking about religion and community. Twist
highlights both the spirituality and the cosmopolitanism of these
authors, bringing their thought into dialogue with the work of
Jean-Luc Nancy. Nancy is critical of communities based on a single
guiding principle (be it God or Reason) and thus involving a
universalizing core that leads to conflicts between identity
groups. He proposes alternative notions of both religious faith (a
postmonotheistic version with elements of mysticism) and community
(spontaneous communities requiring no shared identity). Twist
relates these arguments to post-9/11 debates over cosmopolitanism
and religion, illuminating how the writers under study draw upon
mystical Islam's deconstructive potential, finding divine insight
in love, sex, music, pain, and beauty. Such a worldly and affective
spirituality dispels associations between Islam and sexual
conservatism while rejecting monotheistic ideology. Thus, unlike
the homogenizing drive of universalist cosmopolitanism, these
writers' nonfoundational conceptualizations undermine the
twenty-first century's "clash-of-civilizations" narrative and open
up space for new ways of coexisting. JOSEPH TWIST is Fixed-term
Lecturer in German at University College Dublin.
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