"Critical Islam" debating/negotiating modernity

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Mincheva, Dilyana

Issue Date

2012

Volume

14

Issue

Type

Journal Article

Language

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

The intellectual discourse of Muslim elites born and educated in a Western environment gives impetus, sometimes not entirely consciously, to the debate on the critical potential of the public sphere. This new Islamic critique suggests that the Western public spheres lose their cohesive force and political thrust and practically dismantle into fragmented, disparate, and alienated discourses under increasing transnational pressures because they have never questioned their normative secular underpinnings. This new critical insight implies new modes of public participation and occasions a transformation of the traditional notion of public sphere as it has been described by prominent Western theoreticians of modernity (such as Jurgen Habermas). The debate between the classical Western approach to "public sphere" and modernity and the "new" Islamic critique of it (via Tariq Ramadan, Fethi Benslama, and Malek Chebel) is at the center of this paper.

Description

Citation

Mincheva, Dilyana. (2012), "Critical Islam" debating/negotiating modernity. Journal of Religion & Society, 14.

Publisher

Rabbi Myer and Dorothy Kripke Center, Creighton University

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

Identifier

ISSN

1522-5658

EISSN