Islamic Modernities in World Society: The Rise, Spread, and Fragmentation of a Hegemonic Idea
Islamic Modernities in World Society: The Rise, Spread, and Fragmentation of a Hegemonic Idea
Professor and Head of the Centre for Contemporary Middle East Studies
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Abstract
How is one “authentically” modern? Substantively drawing on contemporary social theory, this book investigates the multiplicity of answers that Muslims have given to this question since the end of the nineteenth century. Through six historical and thematic case studies, the author examines the historical evolution of multiple modernities within Islam. The book argues that we can observe the rise and spread of a relatively hegemonic idea according to which the relation to Islamic traditions bestows projects of Muslim modernities with cultural authenticity. At the same time, it provides an interpretation of this specifically Islamic discourse of modernity as an inherent part of global modernity in conceptual terms understood as the emergence of world society.
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Front Matter
- Introduction: Why this Book and What Is its Argument?
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Part I State of the Art and Theoretical Framework
Dietrich Jung -
Part II Modern State Formation and the Islamic Discourse of Modernity
Dietrich Jung -
Part III Science, Economics, and Agency in the Islamic Discourse of Modernity
Dietrich Jung-
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Boundary Negotiations between Islam and Science: The Islamization of Knowledge and the Idea of an Islamic University
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Boundary Negotiations between Islam and Economics: Islamic Finance, Halal Markets, and the Muslim Entrepreneur
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Multiple Jihads: Modern Social Actorhood in the Name of Islam
- Conclusions: The Mosaic of Islamic Modernities
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Boundary Negotiations between Islam and Science: The Islamization of Knowledge and the Idea of an Islamic University
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End Matter
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