Identity, Politics and the Study of Islam - Current Dilemmas in the Study of Religions - Matt Sheedy

Identity, Politics and the Study of Islam - Current Dilemmas in the Study of Religions - Matt Sheedy

1. The Modesty of Theory

Identity, Politics and the Study of Islam - Current Dilemmas in the Study of Religions - Matt Sheedy

Ruth Mas [+-]
Freie Universitaet Berlin
Ruth Mas is a Visiting Research Fellow in the Berlin Graduate School: Muslim Cultures and Societies at the Freie Universitaet Berlin.

Description

In this contribution, I use the “dispute” between Omid Safi and Aaron Hughes to rethink the relationship between theory and politics. I argue that while scholars of religion cannot avoid being pushed into political discussions, there are crucial differences between “intervention, collaboration, and interpellation” that need to be recognized so that contemporary political issues don't stand in the place of theory. Drawing on the likes of Stuart Hall, Weber, Foucault, and Asad, I urge for more rigorous attention to the lines between our political commitments and the theoretical goal of open-ended inquiry, which means paying attention to the ways in which we are all caught up in ideological state apparatuses, to borrow a line from Althusser, and how theory authorizes politics and vice versa. More concretely, I urge scholars to think about how critique is tied to normative assumptions about the relationship between Christianity, secularism, and Enlightenment, and how “Islam” and “Muslim modalities” are made to fit within this “modernist enterprise.”

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Citation

Mas, Ruth. 1. The Modesty of Theory. Identity, Politics and the Study of Islam - Current Dilemmas in the Study of Religions. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 19-42 Sep 2018. ISBN 9781781794890. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=30323. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.30323. Sep 2018

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