A Reading of the Book, Politics, Law, and Community in Islamic Thought: The Taymiyyan Moment

Volume 1|Issue 2| Summer 2012 |Discussions

Abstract

Islam, like other religions, rests on narratives. The way in which this narrated tradition is received or understood by a generation, or the way it is modified, may determine the meaning of what is left behind for the following generation. At a time when many in the East and the West insist it is high time to stop seeing Islam as willing to go along with contemporary political challenges, Ovamir Anjum gives an alternative reading of the intellectual heritage that motivates such a conclusion.
Download Article Download Issue Cite this Article Subscribe for a year Cite this Article

Lebanese writer and translator whose major translations include The Gun and the Olive Branch: The Roots of Violence in the Middle East by British journalist David Hirst, The Roaring Nineties by American economist Joseph Stiglitz, and Unrevealed Milestones in the Iraqi National Nuclear Program 1981-1991 by Dhafir Selbi, Zuhair Al-Chalabi, and Dr Imad Khadduri.

× Citation/Reference
Arab Center
Harvard
APA
Chicago