Synopses & Reviews
The debate over Islam and modernity tends to be approached from a Eurocentric perspective that presents Western norms as a template for progress - against which Islamic societies can be measured. This misses the historical development of Muslim reformist thought that actively engages with the world around it and seeks to reconfigure Islam within the diverse conditions of modernity. Safdar Ahmed paints a complex and nuanced picture that goes beyond the idea that Muslim reformers have either reproduced or reacted against Western ideas. Rather, Ahmed argues, they have reconstructed and appropriated these ideas, and so the thread of Western influence runs through modern Islamic thought on nationalism and sovereignty, femininity and gender. Ahmed uncovers new historiographical perspectives by critically examining the work of prominent intellectuals, such as Muhammad Abduh, Qasim Amin and Abdul A'la Maududi.
Review
To come
About the Author
Safdar Ahmed is a lecturer and tutor in the Department of Islamic and Arabic Studies at the University of Sydney, Australia where he also obtained his PhD.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Islam, Postcolonialsm and Modernity
2. Islamic Modernism and the Reification of Religion
3. Literary Romanticism and Islamic Modernity: The Case of Urdu Poetry
4. Education and the Status of Women
5. Muhammad Iqbal, Islam and Modern Nationalism
6. The Theory of Divine Sovereignty
7. Maududi and Gendering of Muslim Identity
8. Progressive Islam: The Hermeneutical Turn
9. Conclusion