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Transformations of Tradition probes how the encounter with colonial
modernity conditioned Islamic jurists' conceptualizations of the
shari'a. Departing from the tendency to focus on reformist-minded
thinkers and politically charged issues, Junaid Quadri directs his
attention towards the overlooked jurisprudential writings of
Muhammad Bakhit al-Muti-i (1854-1935), Mufti of Egypt and a
frequent critic of the famed reformists Muhammad 'Abduh and Rashid
Rida. There, he locates a remarkable series of foundational
intellectual shifts. Offering a fresh perspective on a pivotal
period in the history of Islamic thought, Quadri tracks how Bakhit
reworks the relationship of the shari'a to categories of
understanding as fundamental as history and authority, science and
technology, and religion and the secular, thereby upending the very
ground upon which Islamic law had until then functioned. Through
close readings of complex legal texts and mining of oft-neglected
archives, this carefully researched study situates its argument in
both the contested scholarly world of a quickly-changing Cairo, and
the transregional school of Hanafi law as represented by jurists
writing in Kazan, Lucknow, and Baghdad. Examining Islamic
jurisprudential discourse in the colonial moment, Transformations
of Tradition uncovers a shari'a that is neither a medieval holdover
nor merely a pragmatic concession to the demands of a new world,
but rather deeply entangled with the epistemological commitments of
colonial modernity.
Transformations of Tradition probes how the encounter with colonial
modernity conditioned Islamic jurists' conceptualizations of the
shari'a. Departing from the tendency to focus on reformist-minded
thinkers and politically charged issues, Junaid Quadri directs his
attention towards the overlooked jurisprudential writings of
Muhammad Bakhit al-Muti-i (1854-1935), Mufti of Egypt and a
frequent critic of the famed reformists Muhammad 'Abduh and Rashid
Rida. There, he locates a remarkable series of foundational
intellectual shifts. Offering a fresh perspective on a pivotal
period in the history of Islamic thought, Quadri tracks how Bakhit
reworks the relationship of the shari'a to categories of
understanding as fundamental as history and authority, science and
technology, and religion and the secular, thereby upending the very
ground upon which Islamic law had until then functioned. Through
close readings of complex legal texts and mining of oft-neglected
archives, this carefully researched study situates its argument in
both the contested scholarly world of a quickly-changing Cairo, and
the transregional school of Hanafi law as represented by jurists
writing in Kazan, Lucknow, and Baghdad. Examining Islamic
jurisprudential discourse in the colonial moment, Transformations
of Tradition uncovers a shari'a that is neither a medieval holdover
nor merely a pragmatic concession to the demands of a new world,
but rather deeply entangled with the epistemological commitments of
colonial modernity.
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