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The Sociology of Islam

Knowledge, Power and Civility

Salvatore, Armando

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1. Auflage Mai 2016
344 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-119-10997-6
John Wiley & Sons

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The Sociology of Islam is an interpretive account of Islam as a religion and civilization in world history and global society, which focuses on the notions of knowledge-culture, power and civility to provide key interpretive and analytic tools to practitioners.

* The first substantial introduction to the field of the Sociology of Islam that combines theoretical reflections with historical analysis
* Explores the original civilizational trajectory of Islam and its specific entry point into modernity
* Develops a narrative and analytic thread that makes the 'dual' role of Islam - as a religion and civilization - comprehensible to non-specialists
* Allows Islamic Studies specialists and students to locate the study of Islam in a comparative perspective with the help of simple, yet rigorous conceptual tools drawn from sociology and social theory
* The author is a scholar of both the Sociology of Islam and Comparative Civilizational Analysis and ideally placed to write this text

Preface and Acknowledgments ix

Introduction 1

Knowledge and Power in the Sociology of Islam 1

Knowledge/Charisma vs. Power/Wealth: The Challenge of Religious Movements 18

Civility as the Engine of the Knowledge-Power Equation: Islam and 'Islamdom' 23

PART I Patterns of Civility

1 The Limits of Civil Society and the Path to Civility 43

The Origins of Modern Civil Society 43

Civil Society as a Site of Production of Modern Power 50

Folding Civil Society into a Transversal Notion of Civility 57

2 Brotherhood as a Matrix of Civility: The Islamic Ecumene and Beyond 73

Between Networking, 'Charisma,' and Social Autonomy: The Contours of 'Spiritual' Brotherhoods 73

Beyond Sufism: The Unfolding of the Brotherhood 85

Rewriting Charisma into Brotherhood 92

PART II Islamic Civility in Historical and Comparative Perspective

3 Flexible Institutionalization and the Expansive Civility of the Islamic Ecumene 105

The Steady Expansion of Islamic Patterns of Translocal Civility 105

Authority, Autonomy, and Power Networks: A Grid of Flexible Institutions 114

The Permutable Combinations of Normativity and Civility 118

4 Social Autonomy and Civic Connectedness: The Islamic Ecumene in Comparative Perspective 131

New Patterns of Civic Connectedness Centered on the 'Commoners' 131

Liminality, Charisma, and Social Organization 140

Municipal Autonomy vs. Translocal Connectedness 147

PART III Modern Islamic Articulations of Civility

5 Knowledge and Power: The Civilizing Process before Colonialism 165

From the Mongol Impact to the Early Modern Knowledge-Power Configurations 165

Taming theWarriors into Games of Civility? Violence, Warfare, and Peace 176

The LongWave of PowerDecentralization 189

6 Colonial Blueprints of Order and Civility 201

The Metamorphosis of Civility under Colonialism 201

Court Dynamics and Emerging Elites: The Complexification of the Civilizing Process 218

Class, Gender, and Generation: The Ultimate Testing Grounds of the Educational-Civilizing Project 226

7 Global Civility and Its Islamic Articulations 239

The Dystopian Globalization of Civility 239

Diversifying Civility as the Outcome of Civilizing Processes 251

From Islamic Exceptionalism to a Plural Islamic Perspective 260

Conclusion 271

Overcoming Eurocentric Views: Religion and Civility within Islam/Islamdom 271

The Institutional Mold of Islamic Civility: Contractualism vs. Corporatism? 278

From the Postcolonial Condition toward New Fragile Patterns of Translocal Civility 287

Index 295
Sociologists of religion have long been awaiting a successor volume to Brian Turner 's pathbreaking but now dated Weber and Islam (1974). Armando Salvatore's new book provides just this update and much more. Ranging across a host of critical case studies and theoretical issues, Salvatore provides a masterful account of religious ethics, rationalization, and civility across the breadth of the Muslim world, from early times to today. The result is a book of deep intellectual insight, important, not just for the sociology of Islam, but for scholars and students interested in religion, ethics, and modernity in all civilizational traditions.
Robert Hefner, Boston University

The sociology of Islam has been a late and controversial addition to the sociology of religion. This field of research has been the principal target of the critique of Orientalism and after 9/11 the study of Islam became heavily politicized. Terrorist attacks in Paris and Beirut have only compounded the long-standing difficulties of objective interpretation and understanding. In the first volume of what promises to be a major three volume masterpiece, Armando Salvatore steers a careful and judicious course through the various pitfalls that attend the field. The result is an academic triumph combining a sweeping historical vision of Islam with an analytical framework that is structured by the theme of knowledge-power. One waits with huge excitement for the delivery of the remaining volumes.
Bryan Turner, City University of New York

A brilliant, pioneering effort to explain the cosmopolitan ethos within Islamicate civilization, The Sociology of Islam encompasses all the terminological boldness of Marshal Hodgson, making the Persianate and Islamicate elements of civic cosmopolitanism, across the vast Afro-Eurasian ecumene, accessible to the widest possible readership in both the humanities and the social sciences.
Bruce B. Lawrence, author of Who is Allah? (2015)