Introduction to Special Issue on “Exploring New Assemblages of Islamic Expert Education in Western Europe”
Abstract
:Rather than the manufactured clash of civilizations, we need to concentrate on the slow working together of cultures that overlap, borrow from each other, and live together in far more interesting ways than any abridged or inauthentic mode of understanding can allow. But for that kind of wider perception we need time and patient and skeptical inquiry, supported by faith in communities of interpretation that are difficult to sustain in a world demanding instant action and reaction.
1. Introduction
What Constitutes ‘Relevant’ and ‘Apt’ Islamic Knowledge and Expert Education of Future Islamic Authorities in Western Europe?
2. Deconstructing Narratives
3. Mapping the Problem-Space
An ensemble of questions and answers around which a horizon of identifiable stakes (conceptual as well as ideological-political stakes) hangs. That is to say, what defines this discursive context are not only the particular problems that get posed as problems as such (…), but the particular questions that seem worth asking and the kinds of answers that seem worth having. Notice, then, that a problem-space is very much a context of dispute, a context of rival views, a context, if you like, of knowledge and power.
3.1. ‘Outsiders’ Secular Modernity’ versus ‘Insiders’ Confessional Tradition’
3.2. Outsiders’ Secular Hegemony
3.3. Insiders’ Critique of the Islamic Tradition
Critique is central to a living tradition; it is essential to how its followers assess the relevance of the past for the present, and the present for the future.
4. Articulations of New Assemblages of Islamic Higher Education
5. Relevance
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
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1. | More on these initiatives, see among others: (Drees and van Koningsveld 2008; Aslan 2013; Agai et al. 2014; Leirvik 2016; Boender 2014, 2019). |
2. | Note that this ‘educational dualism’ does not exclusively occur in a diasporic context, but is also manifest in the postcolonial educational structures in Muslim majority countries (see among others: Cook 1999). |
3. | With few notable exceptions, such as the Dutch Adrianus Relandus (1679–1718) (Vrolijk and van Leeuwen 2013). |
4. | Topolski indicates how this ‘philological turn’, “which depicts itself as moving away from ‘religion’ towards science and secularism”, at the same time “naturalizes the hierarchical distinction of religious classifications” (namely ‘Semitic’, which is a ‘religious category’ containing Jews and Arabs (2018, p. 66)). Therefore, “although they claimed to be scientific and free from theological influence, these new philological categories incorporated the previous ‘religious’ hierarchy”; illustrating what Topolski refers to as ‘the race-religion constellation’ (Topolski 2018, p. 65). |
5. | This also has repercussions on Western ‘university theology’, which is historically associated with the Protestant Reformation and its theology performed within ‘the framework of a secular university, infused with liberal values, (…) associated with academic freedom, (…) [and combining] a practice-oriented insider perspective with a critically oriented outsider perspective” (Leirvik 2016, p. 128). |
6. | In her seminal Anthropological Review article (1989), Abu-Lughod used the description of ‘zones of theorizing’, which indicated the dominant ‘theoretical metonyms’ by which—as in her review—the “vast and complex area of the Arab world” is grasped (1989, p. 280). For her, the “three central zones of theorizing within Middle East anthropology [were]: segmentation, the harem, and Islam” (ibid., p. 280). She further explored in her article why this is the case. |
7. | As Asad explains: “In their representation of ‘Islamic tradition,’ Orientalists and anthropologists have often marginalized the place of argument and reasoning surrounding traditional practices. Argument is generally represented as a symptom of ‘the tradition in crisis’, on the assumption that ‘normal’ tradition (...) excludes reasoning just as it requires unthinking conformity. But these contrasts and equations are themselves the work of a historical motivation, manifest in Edmund Burke’s ideological opposition between ‘tradition’ and ‘reason’, an opposition which was elaborated by the conservative theorists who followed him, and introduced into sociology by Weber” (Asad 1986, p. 16). |
8. | Foucault understood ‘government’ as the “regulation of conduct by the more or less rational application of the appropriate technical means” (Hindess 1996, p. 106, cited in Lemke 2002). As explained by Lemke, crucial in Foucault’s understanding of government is the relation he sees implicit in the term between ‘governance of the self’ (subjectivization) and ‘governing others’ by the modern nation-state. This allows Lemke to conclude that “in his history of governmentality Foucault endeavors to show how the modern sovereign state and the modern autonomous individual codetermine each other’s emergence” (Foucault 1991; Lemke 2002, p. 51). |
9. | We would like to thank Prof. Dr. Alison Scott-Baumann for her important feedback on this matter. |
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Groeninck, M.; Boender, W. Introduction to Special Issue on “Exploring New Assemblages of Islamic Expert Education in Western Europe”. Religions 2020, 11, 285. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11060285
Groeninck M, Boender W. Introduction to Special Issue on “Exploring New Assemblages of Islamic Expert Education in Western Europe”. Religions. 2020; 11(6):285. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11060285
Chicago/Turabian StyleGroeninck, Mieke, and Welmoet Boender. 2020. "Introduction to Special Issue on “Exploring New Assemblages of Islamic Expert Education in Western Europe”" Religions 11, no. 6: 285. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11060285
APA StyleGroeninck, M., & Boender, W. (2020). Introduction to Special Issue on “Exploring New Assemblages of Islamic Expert Education in Western Europe”. Religions, 11(6), 285. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11060285