Overview -
Progressive Muslims
Product Details
- Pub. Date: May 2003
- Publisher: Oneworld
- Sales Rank: 803,648
Synopsis
Confronting such key contemporary issues as racism, justice, sexuality, and gender, this book offers a revealing insight into the real challenges faced by Muslims of both sexes in Western society.
Publishers Weekly
Safi, a Colgate University professor, assembles a diverse set of essays by and about "progressive" Muslims. The essays vary in topic and in effectiveness, but generally seek to challenge the images of Islam held by both xenophobic Westerners and extremist Muslims. Safi's introduction, though showing insight into many problems today's Muslims face but rarely discuss publicly, is clunky, citing sources from Gandhi to Bob Dylan. Part I offers hard-hitting essays that are sure to be controversial in their discussion of what scholar Tazim Kassam claims is a "curtailment... of civil liberties such as freedom of inquiry and the expression of dissenting opinions" in the U.S. after September 11. There are also some triumphant essays. Scott Siraj al-Haqq Kugle superbly analyzes Islam's categorization of homosexuality as a sin in an essay that is long overdue and probably the only scholarly work of its kind. Gwendolyn Simmons's piece demands the establishment of feminism as Islamic in a touching essay-cum-memoir that connects her growth as a Muslim female to her experience as a young African-American during the Civil Rights era. The incomparable Amina Wadud offers an excellent article on racial tensions between immigrant and indigenous Muslims, while Marcia Hermansen pens the volume's bravest and most honest contribution, addressing the increasing conservatism of her American Muslim students-a topic previously not discussed outside the Muslim community. This collection is recommended for those who yearn for realistic information about Muslims, and for Muslims who are disgruntled with current Islamic leadership. (Sept.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and Recommendations
Editorial Reviews -
Progressive Muslims
Publishers Weekly
Safi, a Colgate University professor, assembles a diverse set of essays by and about "progressive" Muslims. The essays vary in topic and in effectiveness, but generally seek to challenge the images of Islam held by both xenophobic Westerners and extremist Muslims. Safi's introduction, though showing insight into many problems today's Muslims face but rarely discuss publicly, is clunky, citing sources from Gandhi to Bob Dylan. Part I offers hard-hitting essays that are sure to be controversial in their discussion of what scholar Tazim Kassam claims is a "curtailment... of civil liberties such as freedom of inquiry and the expression of dissenting opinions" in the U.S. after September 11. There are also some triumphant essays. Scott Siraj al-Haqq Kugle superbly analyzes Islam's categorization of homosexuality as a sin in an essay that is long overdue and probably the only scholarly work of its kind. Gwendolyn Simmons's piece demands the establishment of feminism as Islamic in a touching essay-cum-memoir that connects her growth as a Muslim female to her experience as a young African-American during the Civil Rights era. The incomparable Amina Wadud offers an excellent article on racial tensions between immigrant and indigenous Muslims, while Marcia Hermansen pens the volume's bravest and most honest contribution, addressing the increasing conservatism of her American Muslim students-a topic previously not discussed outside the Muslim community. This collection is recommended for those who yearn for realistic information about Muslims, and for Muslims who are disgruntled with current Islamic leadership. (Sept.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Features -
Progressive Muslims
Table of Contents
| List of contributors | |
| Introduction: The times they are a-changin' - a Muslim quest for justice, gender quality and pluralism | |
| 1 | The ugly modern and the modern ugly: reclaiming the beautiful in Islam | |
| 2 | In search of progressive Islam beyond 9/11 | |
| 3 | Islam: a civilizational project in progress | |
| 4 | The debts and burdens of critical Islam | |
| 5 | On being a scholar of Islam: risks and responsibilities | |
| 6 | Transforming feminism: Islam, women and gender justice | |
| 7 | Progressive Muslims and Islamic jurisprudence: the necessity for critical engagement with marriage and divorce law | |
| 8 | Sexuality, diversity and ethics in the agenda of progressive Muslims | |
| 9 | Are we up to the challenge? The need for a radical re-ordering of the Islamic discourse on women | |
| 10 | Muslims, pluralism, and interfaith dialogue | |
| 11 | American Muslim identity: race and ethnicity in progressive Islam | |
| 12 | Islamic democracy and pluralism | |
| 13 | How to put the genie back in the bottle? "Identity" Islam and Muslim youth cultures in America | |
| 14 | What is the victory of Islam? Towards a different understanding of the Ummah and political success in the contemporary world | |
| Further Reading | |
| Index | |
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