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Islamic Reform and Conservatism Indira Falk Gesink

Islamic Reform and Conservatism By Indira Falk Gesink

Islamic Reform and Conservatism by Indira Falk Gesink


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Summary

The reform debates at al-Azhar Madrasa in nineteenth-century Cairo - one of the most influential centres of religious study in Sunni Islam - were enormously influential for twentieth-century Islamic thought. This book argues that narratives of these debates overemphasize the roles of modernists like Muhammad 'Abduh, obscuring important themes.

Islamic Reform and Conservatism Summary

Islamic Reform and Conservatism: Al-Azhar and the Evolution of Modern Sunni Islam by Indira Falk Gesink

The famed reform debates at al-Azhar Madrasa in nineteenth-century Cairo, one of the most influential centres of religious study in Sunni Islam, were enormously influential for twentieth-century Islamic thought. Here Indira Gesink offers a revisionist history of these debates over curricular and administrative reforms, and challenges our understanding of the struggle between Islamic reform and conservatism. It has been assumed that famous Islamic modernists such as Muhammad 'Abduh instigated the reform movement and the ideas of modern religious life that emanated from al-Azhar and permeated Islamic society, a development that religious conservatives opposed. Gesink draws on obscure, but important, archival sources, legal manuals and ephemeral journals to tell the other side of the story, and to illustrate the important contributions of conservative scholars to the evolution of twentieth-century Sunni Islam. Conservative 'opponents of reform' engaged many of the same issues as reformers and actively pursued alternative visions of reform. In fact, texts of enacted reforms show greater attention to concerns of conservatives than to the original programmes of Muhammad 'Abduh, and conservatives led 'ulama committees that generated and implemented reforms. Had religious conservatives not contributed to the reforms of the early twentieth century, these reforms would have lacked the crucial cultural assonance that permitted them to become rooted in public life, in an environment of rising nationalist anti-British sentiment which saw 'Abduh as a willing agent of colonialists. The debates ultimately catalyzed public acceptance of secularism, Islamic modernism and radical Islamism. They also led to the practice of lay legal interpretation, the proliferation of competing interpretations within Sunni Islam and the rise of militant sects. By drawing on obscure archival sources and restoring conservative voices to the debate, 'Islamic Reform and Conservatism' presents a more nuanced picture of the al-Azhar debates and the forces that shaped Islamic religious life in the twentieth century than has become the norm. Its original scholarship and fresh analysis make this book indispensable for all those interested in the modern Middle East, religious history, Islamic studies, radical Islam and militancy, secularism, modernism and religious reform.

Islamic Reform and Conservatism Reviews

' Indira Gesink's deeply researched study on al-Azhar reform sheds new light on a major chapter in the history of modern Islam. Dispensing with conventional portrayals of entrenched conservatives resisting enlightened modernists, Gesink reveals a far more nuanced and complicated set of intellectual and political struggles ... Gesink's book most certainly deserves the attention of readers interested in modern Islamic institutions and thought along with specialists on Egypt.' David Commins, Professor of History at Dickinson College and author of The Wahhabi Mission and Saudi Arabia (I.B.Tauris, 2006) ' - an innovative study of the debate over educational reform, which was a central issue in the broader movement of Islamic reform in nineteenth-century Egypt. Gesink shows that the familiar narrative of Islamic modernism, in which enlightened reformers struggled to revivify a stagnant educational culture and civilization, and to overcome its blindly conservative defenders, is based to a large extent on the reformers' polemical portrayal of themselves and their opponents.' Kenneth M Cuno, Associate Professor of History at the University of Illinois and author of The Pasha's Peasants: Land, Society, and Economy in Lower Egypt 1740-1858 (1992)

About Indira Falk Gesink

Indira Falk Gesink is Associate Professor of History at Baldwin-Wallace College in Berea, Ohio. She received her PhD in History from Washington University in St. Louis in 2000, and lived in Egypt in 1995-1996 and 1998.

Table of Contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS Ch1: Introduction Ch 2: Religion and the State: al-Azhar during Muhammad 'Ali Ch 3: Order and Disorder: The Evolving Critique of Madrasa Education (1834-1870) Ch 4: Progress, Nationalism and the Negative Construction of al-Azhar 'Ulama (1870-1882) Ch 5: A Conservative Defense of Taqlid Ch 6: Efficiency, Mission and the Meaning of 'Ilm (1882-1899) Ch 7: The Syrian Riwaq Cholera Riot Ch 8: Muhammad 'Abduh and Ijtihad Ch 9: Who Reformed al-Azhar? Ch 10: Conclusion Notes Selected Bibliography Index

Additional information

NLS9781780764276
9781780764276
1780764278
Islamic Reform and Conservatism: Al-Azhar and the Evolution of Modern Sunni Islam by Indira Falk Gesink
New
Paperback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2014-07-28
320
N/A
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