Islamism : contested perspectives on political Islam
著者
書誌事項
Islamism : contested perspectives on political Islam
Stanford University Press, 2010
- hbk.
- pbk. : alk. paper
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 179-182)
収録内容
- The debate about Islamism in the public sphere / Richard C. Martin and Abbas Barzegar
- Inclusive Islamism : the utility of diversity / Donald K. Emmerson
- Inventing Islamism : the violence of rhetoric / Daniel M. Varisco
- The spectrum of Islamic politics / Graham E. Fuller
- Terminological problems for Muslim lives / Amir Hussain
- Islamism : whose debate is it? / Hassan Hanafi
- Between etymology and realpolitik / Nadia Yassine
- Academic word games / Hillel Fradkin
- Islamism : ism or wasm? / Ziba Mir-Hosseini and Richard Tapper
- Rejecting Islamism and the need for concepts from within the Islamic tradition / Syed Farid Alatas
- Islam at risk : the discourse on Islam and violence / Bruce Lawrence
- Naming terror / Anouar Majid
- Political Islam, liberalism, and the diagnosis of a problem / M. Zuhdi Jasser
- Ideology, not religion / Angel Rabasa
- Why Islamism should be renamed / Feisal Abdul Rauf
- Mitigating misrepresentation / Daniel M.Varisco
- Broadening representation / Donald K. Emmerson
内容説明・目次
内容説明
As America struggles to understand Islam and Muslims on the world stage, one concept in particular dominates public discourse: Islamism. References to Islamism and Islamists abound in the media, in think tanks, and in the general study of Islam, but opinions vary on the differences of degree and kind among those labeled Islamists. This book debates what exactly is said when we use this contentious term in discussing Muslim religion, tradition, and social conflict.
Two lead essays offer differing viewpoints: Donald K. Emmerson argues that Islamism is a useful term for a range of Muslim reform movements-very few of which advocate violence-while Daniel M. Varisco counters that the public specter of violence and terrorism by Islamists too often infects the public perceptions of Islam more generally. Twelve commentaries, written by Muslim and non-Muslim intellectuals, enrich the debate with differing insights and perspectives.
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