ISLAM AND RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE IN THE POSTMODERN
Ahmad Sidqi(1*)
(1) Institute of Social Science Uludag University, Turkey
(*) Corresponding Author
Abstract
The Islamic experience in the modern world reconstitutes the relation between human and God on the basis of the fundamental authority of the holy Quran. Mosque as a symbol, this monument to political power contains some of the most basic contradictions thats characterize Muslim societies in the modern world. A similar distinction applies to the to the morning officialy attributed to the mosque, it maybe “open”, “toleran”, “cosmopolitan”, and “modern” Muslim reformers, embattled governments against increasingly militant oppositional groups which have adopted Islam as an overarching instrument of discourse and struggle. Muslim reformers, activists, and militants nearly always say that theirs is a “movement”, a ‘current” which is still in the process of gestation and evolution. Emancipatory politics is concerned, above all, with themes of justice, equality, and participation, the very same themes that most Muslim reformers are in fact concerned with. Islamic experience involves a redefination of identity in a world which has become homogenized by the globalizing process of modernism The Islamic experience is therefore a call for an emancipatory politics which means justice where there is none, a more egalitarian distribution of wealth and a more democratic system of decision making.
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Abraham, E. 1993. Khomeinism.The University of California Press, Berkeley.
Ahmad, E. 1980. From Potato Sack to Potato Mash: The Contemporary Crisis of the Third World. Arab Studiest Quarterly 2: 223-234
________. 1980a. Postcolonial Systems of Power. Arab studiest Quartery 2:350-365.
________. 1981. The Neo Facist State: Notes on the Pathology of Power in the Third World. Arab Studies Quarterly 3:170-180
Erikson, E. 1969. Childhood and Society. Norton, New York.
Fanon, F. 1969. The Wretched of The Earth. Penguin, New York
Gannoushi, R. 1991. Interview. Qiraat Siyasiyyah (in Arabic) 1:5-40.
___________, 1991. Interview with Rashed Gannoushi. Qiraat Siyasiyyah (in Arabic) 2:157-184.
Gidden, A. 1991. Modernity And Self-Identity. Stanford University Press, Stanford.
________. 1990 The Consequences of Modernity. Polity, Cambridge.
Huntington, S. 1993. The Clash of Civilization. Foreign Affairs 72:22-49
Joseph, R. 1981. Semiotics of the Islamic Mosque. Arab Studies Quarterly. 3:275-184.
Kepel, G. 1984. Muslim Extremism In Egypt. University of California Press, Berkeley.
Lewis, B. 1990. The Root Of Muslim Rage. The Atlantic Montly. September 47-64.
Mannheim, K. 1952. Essays On The Sociology Of Knowledge. Routledge And Kegan Paul, London.
Marty, M,. A'la, A. 1980. Fundamentalisms Of Islam. Islamic Publications, Lahore.
Mitchell, T. 1990. Everyday Metaphors Of Power. The theory and Society 19: 545-577.
Rosenau, P. 1992. Postmodernism And The Social Sciences. Princenton University Press, Princenton.
Said, E. 1993. The Pony Islamic Threat. New York Time Magazine. November 62-65.
Salih, T. 1978. Season Of Migration To The North. Heinemann, London.
Takieddine-Amyuni, M. 1980. Tayeb Salih's Season Of Migration To The North. Arab Studies Quarterly. 2:1-18
Turabi, H. 1992. Interview With Dr. Hassan Turabi. Qira'at Siyasiyyah (in Arabic) 3:5-32.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/jf.32800
Article Metrics
Abstract views : 3528 | views : 3286Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
Copyright (c) 2018 Jurnal Filsafat
Jurnal Filsafat Indexed by:
Jurnal Filsafat ISSN 0853-1870 (print), ISSN 2528-6811 (online)