Ever since they became conscious of their relative decline; the societies of the Middle East; and other Islamic countries more generally; have turned to Islam as an antidote to humiliation and decadence. This book examines the political environments; lives and works of those diverse nineteenth and twentieth century Muslim thinkers who believed that Islam was capable of providing practical solutions to the problems of the modern world. The volume provides a balanced account of their contribution to contemporary revolutionary Islam and to political developments in countries from Morocco to Indonesia. The writings and political activity of al-Afghani; Muhammad Abduh; Ayatollah Khomeini; Sayyid Abu'l-A'la Mawdudi; Hasan al-Banna; Sayyid Qutb; Musa al-Sadr; Ali Shariati and Muhammad Baqr al-Sadr are considered; explaining the roots of movements as diverse as the Muslim Brotherhood; the Jama'at-i Islami; the radical Iranian clergy and the militant Shi'i of Lebanon. The book provides an ideal introduction to the complexity and variety of Islamic revival; revealing the motivations of the thinkers who have reshaped the political vocabulary of Islam. Ali Rahnema's major new introductory chapter puts these still hugely influential Muslim thinkers and the movements they inspired in the context of the extraordinarily changed circumstances confronting Islamic countries both internally and internationally since 9/11. He explores the dangers of any Western-Islamic standoff in a situation where both Muslim terrorists and certain chauvinist Christian elements are misusing the religions they ostensibly espouse. It becomes all the more important for Muslims and non-Muslims to understand the real thinking that has long gone in influential Islamic circles. This book intends to make a contribution in this regard. Contributors: David Commins; Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad; Nikki K. Keddie; Chibli Mallat; Baqer Moin; Seyyid Vali Reza Nasr; Augustus Richard Norton; Ali Rahnema; Charles Tripp.
#570837 in Books 2001-07-25 2001-07-25Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.91 x .12 x 7.26l; .40 #File Name: 184176219948 pages
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Informative and confusingBy LEIt introduces the reader to Civil War heavy artillery; but it had a certain degree of incoherence for this reader. I was often unsure which cannon the author was discussing. His writing style seemed to use pronouns that often left you guessing. This led to a degree of incoherence for the non-expert. I felt somewhat like I was reading a computer-generated translation of a text that originated in another language. You understand 90% of the message; but you are not quite sure about that.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A good overview of the subjectBy CustomerTypical Osprey title - Very well researched and written. A good overview of the subject.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Good bookBy MEnnis0852Good book with lots of information; but there is more information that could have been included. Providing the information where the types of artillery had been used and is now shown in display would allow somebody that wanted to learn more do their own research.