Globalized Islam: The Search for a New Ummah

Globalized Islam: The Search for a New Ummah

by Olivier Roy
ISBN-10:
0231134983
ISBN-13:
9780231134989
Pub. Date:
11/03/2004
Publisher:
Columbia University Press
ISBN-10:
0231134983
ISBN-13:
9780231134989
Pub. Date:
11/03/2004
Publisher:
Columbia University Press
Globalized Islam: The Search for a New Ummah

Globalized Islam: The Search for a New Ummah

by Olivier Roy

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Overview

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.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231134989
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 11/03/2004
Series: CERI Series in Comparative Politics and International Studies
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.94(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

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).

Table of Contents

Preface1. Introduction: Islam: A Passage to the West
The failure of political Islam: and what?
Islam as a minority
Acculturation and 'objectification' of Islam
Recasting identities, westernising religiosity
Where are the Muslim reformers?
Crisis of authority and self-enunciation
Religion as identity
The triumph of the self
Secularisation through religion?
Is jihad closer to Marx than to the Koran?
What is Bin Laden's stategy? 2. Post-Islamism
The failure of political Islam revisited
From Islamism to nationalism
States without nation, brothers and state
The crisis of diasporas
Islam is never a stretegic factor as such
The political integratoin of Islamists
From utopia to conservatism
The elusive 'Muslim vote'
Democracy without democrats
The Iranian Islamic revolution: how politics defines religion
Islamisation as a factor secularisation
Conservative re-Islamisation
Post-Islamism: the privatisation of religion3. Muslims in the West
How to live as a sateless Muslim minority
Historical paradigms of Muslims as a minority
Acculturation and identity reconstruction4. The Triumph of hte Religios Self
The loss of religious authority and the 'objectification' of Islam
Immigration and reformulation of Islam
The crisis of authority and religious knowledge
The religious market and the sociology of Islamic actors
Individualisation of enunciation and propaganda
Faith and self
Humanism, ethical Islam and salvation
Enunciation of the self
Recommunitarisation and construction of identity5. Islam in the West or the Westernisation of Islam
The building of Muslim 'churches'
Neo-brohterhoos and New Age religiosity6. The Modernity of an Archaic Way of Thinking: Neofundamentalism
Sources and actors of neofundamentalism
The basic tenets of neofundamentalism
Neofundamentalists and Islamists
Neofundamentalists and radical violence
Why is neofundamentalism successful?
The new frontier of the imagined ummah7. On the Path to War: Bin Laden and Others
Al Qaeda and the new terrorists
Deterritorialisation
Re-islamisation in the West
Uprooting and acculturation
The peripheral jihad
The Western-born or second-generation Muslims
The converts and the 'protest conversion'
The subcontractors
The future of Al Qaeda8. Remapping the World: Civilisation, Religion and Strategy
Culture, religion and civilisations: the conundrum of clash and dialogue
The debate on values
Military strategy on abstract territoriesIndex

What People are Saying About This

James Piscatori

A characteristically informed and incisive analysis of the new transnational movements and globalized responses that have developed in that past twenty years or so in the Muslim world. In this work, as in his others, he draws upon a profound knowledge of individual Muslim groups and an acute understanding of the interaction between theology and politics.... Roy is one of the most important analysts of political Islam today.

James Piscatori, fellow, Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies and Wadham College, University of Oxford

Dale F. Eickelman

Olivier Roy [is] one of the two most distinguished contemporary commentators on the Muslim Middle East and Central Asia. From intensive early work on Afghanistan nearly three decades ago, he has expanded his scope to see the multiple linkages between ideas and political and religious movements throughout the region. He moves almost effortlessly between geopolitics and the politics of interrelated localities, asking new and probing questions in the process

Dale F. Eickelman, Dartmouth College

Faisal Devji

This book extends the argument of Roy's The Failure of Political Islam, both by taking into account the momentous impact of new jihad movements like Al Qaeda, as well as by looking closely at the development of immigrant groups in the West.... Brilliant insights on almost every page.

Faisal Devji, St. Antony's College, University of Oxford

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