Globalized Islam: The Search for a New Ummah

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Columbia University Press, 2004 - 349 Seiten
The spread of Islam around the globe has blurred the connection between a religion, a specific society, and a territory. One-third of the world's Muslims now live as members of a minority. At the heart of this development is, on the one hand, the voluntary settlement of Muslims in Western societies and, on the other, the pervasiveness and influence of Western cultural models and social norms. The revival of Islam among Muslim populations in the last twenty years is often wrongly perceived as a backlash against westernization rather than as one of its consequences. Neofundamentalism has been gaining ground among a rootless Muslim youth--particularly among the second- and third-generation migrants in the West--and this phenomenon is feeding new forms of radicalism, ranging from support for Al Qaeda to the outright rejection of integration into Western society.

In this brilliant exegesis of the movement of Islam beyond traditional borders and its unwitting westernization, Olivier Roy argues that Islamic revival, or "re-Islamization," results from the efforts of westernized Muslims to assert their identity in a non-Muslim context. A schism has emerged between mainstream Islamist movements in the Muslim world--including Hamas of Palestine and Hezbollah of Lebanon--and the uprooted militants who strive to establish an imaginary ummah, or Muslim community, not embedded in any particular society or territory. Roy provides a detailed comparison of these transnational movements, whether peaceful, like Tablighi Jama'at and the Islamic brotherhoods, or violent, like Al Qaeda. He shows how neofundamentalism acknowledges without nostalgia the loss of pristine cultures, constructing instead a universal religious identity that transcends the very notion of culture. Thus contemporary Islamic fundamentalism is not a single-note reaction against westernization but a product and an agent of the complex forces of globalization.

 

Inhalt

II
1
III
17
IV
21
V
26
VI
29
VII
33
VIII
35
IX
38
XXXIII
175
XXXIV
185
XXXV
187
XXXVI
192
XXXVII
197
XXXVIII
201
XXXIX
220
XL
232

X
40
XI
41
XII
58
XIII
62
XIV
65
XV
67
XVI
69
XVII
72
XVIII
75
XIX
80
XX
83
XXI
88
XXII
92
XXIII
97
XXIV
100
XXV
107
XXVI
111
XXVII
117
XXVIII
148
XXIX
151
XXX
156
XXXI
158
XXXII
171
XLI
234
XLII
243
XLIII
247
XLIV
254
XLV
257
XLVI
287
XLVII
290
XLVIII
294
XLIX
304
L
308
LI
309
LII
312
LIII
315
LIV
317
LV
319
LVI
321
LVII
326
LVIII
328
LIX
335
LX
337
LXI
341
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Autoren-Profil (2004)

Olivier Roy is a professor at EHESS, the School of Advanced Studies in Social Sciences in Paris. Among his books are The Failure of Political Islam, The New Central Asia, and (with Mariam Abou Zahab) Islamist Networks: The Afghan-Pakistan Connection (Columbia, 2004).

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