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Islam, Globalization and Postmodernity PDF

253 Pages·1994·2.78 MB·English
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Islam, globalization and postmodernity Events in the last decade have transformed the Muslim world: the Iranian Revolution, the Rushdie affair, the Gulf War. Other influences on Muslim society have perhaps been more penetrating but less obvious. The outside world now reaches into even the most closeted Muslim home through the various channels of the mass media. Processes of globalization have hit traditional cultures so hard and in such a way that they have raised issues for Muslims which can no longer be ignored; Muslims are now forced to engage these issues and to formulate responses to them so that matters which in the past might have been considered by the well-informed few are now debated throughout society by people at every level of social organization. This book examines how Muslims across the globe have responded to these changes and contradictions. It tries to capture and explore some of the debate, uncertainty and conflict which they have generated as Islam moves towards the twenty-first century. The case studies presented—of Turkish, Trinidadian, Malaysian, Pakistani, Egyptian, North American, Middle Eastern and British Islam—describe both the general global processes now affecting Muslims everywhere, and the way in which these processes are moulded by particular local cultural, political and economic configurations. This volume will interest anyone concerned with understanding the dynamics of contemporary Muslim society or seeking insight into the direction in which the Muslim world is moving. Akbar S.Ahmed is Visiting Scholar, Cambridge University; Hastings Donnan is Reader in Social Anthropology, Queen’s University, Belfast Contributors; Richard Antoun; Abubaker Bagader; Ernest Gellner; Tomas Gerholm; Fred Halliday; Judith Nagata; Martin Stokes; Gustav Thaiss; Helen Watson; Anita Weiss; Pnina Werbner. Islam, globalization and postmodernity Edited by Akbar S.Ahmed and Hastings Donnan London and New York First published 1994 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 100001 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. , “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.” © 1994 Selection and editorial matter, Akbar S Ahmed and Hastings Donnan. Individual chapters, the contributors. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book has been requested ISBN 0-203-42213-9 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-73037-2 (Adobe eReader Format) ISBN 0-415-09366-X (Print Edition) ISBN 0-415-09367-8 (pbk) Contents List of contributors vi Foreword by Ernest Gellner x 1 Islam in the age of postmodernity 1 Akbar S.Ahmed and Hastings Donnan 2 Turkish arabesk and the city: Urban popular culture as 21 spatial practice Martin Stokes 3 Contested meanings and the politics of authenticity: The 37 ‘Hosay’ in Trinidad Gustav Thaiss 4 How to be Islamic without being an Islamic state: 63 Contested models of development in Malaysia Judith Nagata 5 The politics of Islamic fundamentalism: Iran, Tunisia and 89 the challenge to the secular state Fred Halliday 6 Contemporary Islamic movements in the Arab world 111 Abubaker A.Bagader 7 Challenges for Muslim women in a postmodern world 123 Anita M.Weiss 8 Women and the veil: Personal responses to global process 137 Helen Watson 9 Sojourners abroad: Migration for higher education in a 157 post-peasant Muslim society Richard T.Antoun 10 Two Muslim intellectuals in the postmodern West: Akbar 187 Ahmed and Ziauddin Sardar Tomas Gerholm v 11 Diaspora and millennium: British Pakistani global-local 209 fabulations of the Gulf War Pnina Werbner Index 233 List of contributors Akbar S.Ahmed is a Fellow of Selwyn College, Cambridge and was until recently Iqbal Fellow at the same university. He is the author of many books on Pakistan and Islam, including Discovering Islam: Making Sense of Muslim History and Society (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1988) and Postmodernism and Islam: Predicament and Promise (Routledge, 1992). The former was made into a television series by the BBC and forms the basis of his latest book, Living Islam (BBC, 1993). Richard T.Antoun has written three books on the basis of his several research trips to Jordan: Arab Village: A Social Structural Study of a Transjordanian Peasant Community (Indiana University Press, 1972); Low-Key Politics: Local-Level Leadership and Change in the Middle East (State University of New York Press, 1979); and Muslim Preacher in the Modern World: A Jordanian Case Study in Comparative Perspective (Princeton University Press, 1989). He is currently working on a fourth book, describing and analysing the implications of international migration for higher education and work from Jordan to Europe, Asia, North America and the Arabian Peninsula. Abubaker A.Bagader was born in Makkah, Saudi Arabia in 1950. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and currently teaches at King Abdel Aziz University in Jeddah. His areas of interest include the anthropology of Islam, social theory, and the sociology of knowledge. He has published several articles and books in Arabic and a number of articles in English. His publications include ‘Islamic and con-temporary anthropological discourse’, ‘Islamization of the social sciences’, ‘The “kutab”: An ethnography of a Qur’anic school in Makkah’, ‘Marriage contracts in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia’, ‘Assassination of light: A collection of short stories from Saudi Arabia’, and ‘The ulema and the modern nation-state’. Hastings Donnan is Reader in Social Anthropology at the Queen’s University of Belfast. He is the author of Marriage among Muslims: Preference and Choice in Northern Pakistan (E J Brill, 1988) and co-editor of Economy and Culture in Pakistan: Migrants and Cities in a Muslim Society (Macmillan, 1991), Border Approaches: An Anthropology of Frontiers (University Press of America, 1994) and Inside the Household: Family and Gender in Pakistan (forthcoming), as well as of several books vii on Ireland. Since 1993 he has been the editor of Man: The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. Ernest Gellner was formerly Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of many books and articles including Muslim Society (Cambridge University Press, 1981), and Postmodernism, Reason and Religion (Routledge, 1992). He is currently Director of Research at the Centre for the Study of Nationalism at the Central European University, Prague. Tomas Gerholm is Associate Professor of Social Anthropology at Stockholm University, Sweden. His main regional interest is the Middle East and he is the author of Market, Mosque and Mafraj (1977), a study of social inequality in what was North Yemen. He is also interested in Islam in the West and is co-editor of The New Islamic Presence in Western Europe (1988). He has also published more generally (mainly in Swedish) on the anthropology of intellectual life and is co- author (with Lena Gerholm) of Doktorshatten (1992). For many years he was on the editorial board of Ethnos. At present he is engaged on research on the rise and fall of cosmopolitanism in Alexandria, Egypt. Fred Halliday studied Politics, Philosophy and Economics at Oxford and later took an MSc at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London and a PhD at the London School of Economics. He was from 1974 to 1982 a Fellow of the Transnational Institute, Amsterdam and Washington, and has since 1983 been teaching at the International Relations Department of the London School of Economics. Since October 1985 he has held a Chair in International Relations at the London School of Economics. His books include Arabia without Sultans (1974), Iran: Dictatorship and Development (1978), Threat from the East? (1982) with Maxine Molyneux, The Ethiopian Revolution (1982), The Making of the Second Cold War (1983), and Cold War, Third World (1989), Revolution and Foreign Policy: The Case of South Yemen, 1967–1987 (1990), Arabs in Exile: Yemeni Communities in Urban Britain (1992), Rethinking International Relations (1994). Several of his books have been translated into Persian and Arabic. Judith Nagata is a professor in the Department of Anthropology at York University, Toronto, Canada. Over the past twenty years, her research has revolved around problems of ethnic identity and has focused on religious movements. Recently, her focus has been on the variable forms and expressions of world religions in different areas, including international Islam, Buddhism and Christianity, principally in Southeast Asia and Canada. Through studies of migrants and other cosmopolitan communities, she attempts to link these strands in a more global frame-work. Her work on ethnicity in Malaysia is recorded in two volumes, Malaysian Mosaic: Perspectives from a Poly-ethnic Society, (UBC Press, 1980) and Pluralism in Malaysia: Myth or Reality? (Leiden, E J Brill, 1976), while her work on religious change, particularly in Malaysian Islam, has resulted in The Reflowering of Malaysian Islam, (UBC Press, 1984), and a volume, edited with Bruce Matthews, Religion, Values and Development in Southeast Asia viii (Institute of Asian Studies, Singapore, 1986), as well as numerous chapters and articles in scholarly books and journals. Martin Stokes received a BA (Hons) in Music from Oxford University in 1984, and the MSt in Social Anthropology (also at Oxford) in 1985. He received a DPhil in Social Anthropology in 1989, after conducting field-work in Istanbul and the Black Sea region of Turkey. He has travelled and worked extensively in Turkey since 1980. He is currently Lecturer in Social Anthropology and Ethnomusicology at the Queen’s University of Belfast, and is the author of The Arabesk Debate: Music and Musicians in Modern Turkey (Clarendon, 1992), and of a number of articles on music and popular culture in Turkey. His ongoing research is focused on issues of transnationalism, place, identity, and the politics of culture in the Middle East. Gustav Thaiss is Chair of the Department of Anthropology at York University, Toronto. He has conducted a study of the bazaar of Tehran focusing on the interrelationship between religion and trade, as well as studying the organisation and rhetoric of religious opposition to the Shah. His interest in the cross-cultural study of Islam led to research on the Shia(cid:127) community in Trinidad. Among his recent publications are articles for the soon to be published Encyclopaedia of the Modern Islamic World (Oxford University Press). Helen Watson is a Fellow of St John’s College and lecturer in social anthropology at the University of Cambridge. She studied social anthropology at Queen’s University Belfast and in Cambridge. Her research interests include gender, conflict, and change. She has worked in North Africa, primarily in Egypt, on urbanization, migration, and gender relations. She has published on women and Islam, fundamentalism, sexual harassment in Europe, and institutionalized violence. Her book on Cairo is entitled Women in the City of the Dead (Hurst, 1992). She is interested in the politics of representation and culture. Current research interests include sectarianism and ethnonationalism in Ireland, and perceptions of exile among the Irish in London. Anita M.Weiss is Associate Professor of International Studies at the University of Oregon. Her doctorate is in Sociology from the University of California at Berkeley. She has published extensively on socioeconomic development and women’s issues in Pakistan and is the author of Walls Within Walls: Life Histories of Working Women in the Old City of Lahore (Westview Press, 1992) and Culture, Class and Development in Pakistan: The Emergence of an Industrial Bourgeoisie in Punjab (Westview Press, 1991). She has been a member of the Executive Board of the American Pakistan Research Organization and a member of the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs’ delegation monitoring the October 1993 elections in Pakistan. Her current research compares and analyses the social implications of rising female literacy rates in Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan and Malaysia. Pnina Werbner is a senior lecturer in social anthropology at Keele University and Research Administrator of the International Centre for Contemporary ix Cultural Research at the universities of Manchester and Keele. Her publications include The Migration Process: Capital, Gifts and Offerings among British Pakistanis (Berg, 1990), Black and Ethnic Leaderships in Britain: The Cultural Dimensions of Political Action, co-edited with Muhammad Anwar (Routledge, 1991) and Economy and Culture in Pakistan: Migrants and Cities in a Muslim Society, co-edited with Hastings Donnan (Macmillan, 1991). She is currently completing two books, one on Islam and politics in Britain, and the second on a transnational Sufi cult. She is the director of a major research project funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, UK, on ‘South Asian popular culture: gender, generation and identity’.

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This book examines the cultural responses of Muslims to the transformations, contradictions and challenges confronting contemporary Islam as it moves towards the twenty-first century. The diffusion of populations, the globalization of culture and the forces of postmodernity have shaken the world lik
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