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Showing that Muslim societies are facing a crisis that is more
cultural than religious, this book focuses on cultural
representations through which social life is experienced in the
Muslim world. It brings a new theoretical framework to address the
secularization process that is underway and the contradictions it
entails. This volume will arouse a new debate on secularization and
the relations between religion, culture and philosophy. The crisis
Muslim societies are undergoing pertains to the culture and not to
the Qur’an to the extent that people do not have access to the
sacred in itself but only for oneself, meaning a cultural
interpretation of the sacred. The Qur’an in itself is not an
obstacle to secularization and modernization since any sacred text
is experienced through culture. If we consider the European
experience where secularization has first emerged, we see that
culture has been transformed from medieval metaphysics to modern
philosophy upholding a civic culture. Discussing secularization
through cultural representation, this book launches new ideas that
fill an important gap in the literature on secularization. It is a
key resource for any readers interested in religious studies,
philosophy and the anthropology of religion.
Showing that Muslim societies are facing a crisis that is more
cultural than religious, this book focuses on cultural
representations through which social life is experienced in the
Muslim world. It brings a new theoretical framework to address the
secularization process that is underway and the contradictions it
entails. This volume will arouse a new debate on secularization and
the relations between religion, culture and philosophy. The crisis
Muslim societies are undergoing pertains to the culture and not to
the Qur'an to the extent that people do not have access to the
sacred in itself but only for oneself, meaning a cultural
interpretation of the sacred. The Qur'an in itself is not an
obstacle to secularization and modernization since any sacred text
is experienced through culture. If we consider the European
experience where secularization has first emerged, we see that
culture has been transformed from medieval metaphysics to modern
philosophy upholding a civic culture. Discussing secularization
through cultural representation, this book launches new ideas that
fill an important gap in the literature on secularization. It is a
key resource for any readers interested in religious studies,
philosophy and the anthropology of religion.
In Radical Arab Nationalism and Political Islam, Lahouari Addi
attempts to assess the history and political legacy of radical Arab
nationalism to show that it contained the seeds of its own
destruction. While the revolutionary regimes promised economic and
social development and sought the unity of Arab nations, they did
not account for social transformations, such as freedom of speech,
that would eventually lead to their decline. But while radical Arab
nationalism fell apart, authoritarian populism did not disappear.
Today it is expressed by political Islam that aims to achieve the
kind of social justice radical Arab nationalism once promised. Addi
creatively links the past and present while also raising questions
about the future of Arab countries. Is political Islam the heir of
radical Arab nationalism? If political Islam succeeds, will it face
the same challenges faced by radical Arab nationalism? Will it be
able to implement modernity? The future of Arab countries, Addi
writes, depends on this crucial issue. It is published in
collaboration with Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, Georgetown
University.
In Radical Arab Nationalism and Political Islam, Lahouari Addi
attempts to assess the history and political legacy of radical Arab
nationalism to show that it contained the seeds of its own
destruction. While the revolutionary regimes promised economic and
social development and sought the unity of Arab nations, they did
not account for social transformations, such as freedom of speech,
that would eventually lead to their decline. But while radical Arab
nationalism fell apart, authoritarian populism did not disappear.
Today it is expressed by political Islam that aims to achieve the
kind of social justice radical Arab nationalism once promised. Addi
creatively links the past and present while also raising questions
about the future of Arab countries. Is political Islam the heir of
radical Arab nationalism? If political Islam succeeds, will it face
the same challenges faced by radical Arab nationalism? Will it be
able to implement modernity? The future of Arab countries, Addi
writes, depends on this crucial issue. It is published in
collaboration with Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, Georgetown
University.
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