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What Is Enlightenment? - Continuity or Rupture in the Wake of the Arab Uprisings (Hardcover)
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What Is Enlightenment? - Continuity or Rupture in the Wake of the Arab Uprisings (Hardcover)
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Political sociology has struggled with predicting the next turn of
transformation in the MENA countries after the 2011 Uprisings. Arab
activists did not articulate explicitly any modalities of their
desired system, although their slogans ushered to a
fully-democratic society. These unguided Uprisings showcase an
open-ended freedom-to question after Arabs underwent their
freedom-from struggle from authoritarianism. The new conflicts in
Egypt, Syria, Yemen, and Libya have fragmented shar'iya
(legitimacy) into distinct conceptualizations: "revolutionary
legitimacy," "electoral legitimacy," "legitimacy of the street,"
and "consensual legitimacy." This volume examines whether the
Uprisings would introduce a replica of the European Enlightenment
or rather stimulate an Arab/Islamic awakening with its own cultural
specificity and political philosophy. By placing Immanuel Kant in
Tahrir Square, this book adopts a comparative analysis of two
enlightenment projects: one Arab, still under construction, with
possible progression toward modernity or regression toward
neo-authoritarianism, and one European, shaped by the past two
centuries. Mohammed D. Cherkaoui and the contributing authors use a
hybrid theoretical framework drawing on three tanwiri
(enlightenment) philosophers from different eras: Ibn Rushd, known
in the west as Averroes (the twelfth century), Immanuel Kant (the
eighteenth century), and Mohamed Abed Al-Jabri (the twentieth
century). The authors propose a few projections about the outcome
of the competition between an Islamocracy vision and what Cherkaoui
terms as a Demoslamic vision, since it implies the Islamist
movements' flexibility to reconcile their religious absolutism with
the prerequisites of liberal democracy. This book also traces the
patterns of change which point to a possible Arab Axial Age. It
ends with the trials of modernity and tradition in Tunisia and an
imaginary speech Kant would deliver at the Tunisian Parliament
after those vibrant debates of the new constitution in 2014.
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