Al-Jabri: The State in Islam-Between Concept and History

Volume 3|Issue 10| Autumn 2014 |Discussions

Abstract

In his critical program al-Jabri starts from the assumption that the authority of inherited sources made a group of us see authenticity in the tradition alone and in the return to it, postulating that genuine authenticity—to the contrary— is what we must achieve in the interaction with contemporary universal thought. He further explained that, in the same vein, some believe that “being contemporary” is only being present in European thought, and that “this understanding prevents this and prevents the idea that really being contemporary for us is what we must bring about through our handling of our heritage in the first place.”
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ACRPS researcher and widely published on in the fields of culture, politics, and history. Some of his major works include: Fate of the Arab League: History and Destiny; Concepts in Human Rights and the State for Islamic Movements; The Image of Europe for the Arabs in the Middle Ages; The Image of Black Peoples in Arab Culture; The Image of the Peoples of the Far East in Arab Culture, and The Crisis of Marxism: History and Destiny.

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