The “Secular” in Post-1967 Islamist Thought; Revisiting Arab Intellectual History and Political Ideology towards 20th Century fin-de-siècle
Abstract
:1. Introduction: A Post-Secular Age
2. Assumptions over the “Secular” and Theoretical Considerations
3. Roots of the “Secular”: Intellectual Labor in the Third World Pendulum
3.1. Debates over the “Secular” after the Naksa
It is in the interest of the ruling elite to preempt Islam and reduce it to shallow formalities so that the problems of poverty, the bad distribution of wealth, the predominance of the consumption mentality, […] would escape the attention of the masses.(as cited in Abu-Rabi’ 2004, p. 119)
Islam is presented and lived as a definite system of beliefs and non-beliefs which cannot be submitted to any critical inquiry. Thus, it divides the space of thinking into two parts: the thinkable and the unthinkable. Both concepts are historical and not, at first, philosophical. The respective domain of each of them changes through history and varies from one social group to another.(as cited in Kassab 2010, p. 178)
Language causes us to fall in drastic errors when we state that there is a conflict on the Muslim world between modernity and fundamentalism, between democracy and fundamentalism, or between secularism and Islamism. We must be wary of this confusion.(as cited in Abu-Rabi’ 2004, pp. 209–10)
3.2. Islamist Thinking in the Tanwir Age: From an Islamist Past to a Hybrid Future
4. Ideology and Political Organizations
Currents of Cross-Ideological Alliances until the 20th Century fin-de-siècle
5. Conclusions: Limits and Perspectives of “Secularization”
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | As British-Iraqi Muslim activist Anas al-Tikriti asserts, CAUS was not only built for fostering intra-Arab cross-ideological dialogue, but also involved British Left partnerships inviting Labour Party members, such as J. Corbyn, T. Benn και G. Galloway (author’s interview with Anas al-Tikriti, 13 March 2019). |
2 | The Tanwir period, starting approximately around 1990s, was a period of debates (especially across Cairo and Damascus) that aimed at re-locating social and political discussions. Thus, tanwir debates addressed the socio-economic realities and challenges at the end of the 20th century, focusing on issues such as civil rights, citizenship, democracy and social justice. |
3 | The Revolutionary Socialists (Trotskyism) in particular, devoted much attempt to open channels of communication with the MB. A member of the party, Samih Najib published a book titled The Muslim Brotherhood: A Socialist View aiming at bridging the gap between the two parties. |
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Shabana, I. The “Secular” in Post-1967 Islamist Thought; Revisiting Arab Intellectual History and Political Ideology towards 20th Century fin-de-siècle. Religions 2023, 14, 686. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060686
Shabana I. The “Secular” in Post-1967 Islamist Thought; Revisiting Arab Intellectual History and Political Ideology towards 20th Century fin-de-siècle. Religions. 2023; 14(6):686. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060686
Chicago/Turabian StyleShabana, Ihab. 2023. "The “Secular” in Post-1967 Islamist Thought; Revisiting Arab Intellectual History and Political Ideology towards 20th Century fin-de-siècle" Religions 14, no. 6: 686. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060686
APA StyleShabana, I. (2023). The “Secular” in Post-1967 Islamist Thought; Revisiting Arab Intellectual History and Political Ideology towards 20th Century fin-de-siècle. Religions, 14(6), 686. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060686