Ebook
What would it mean to imagine Islam as an immanent critique of the West?
Sayyid Ahmad Khan lived in a time of great tribulation for Muslim India under British rule. By examining Khan's work as a critical expression of modernity rooted in the Muslim experience of it, Islam as Critique argues that Khan is essential to understanding the problematics of modern Islam and its relationship to the West.
The book re-imagines Islam as an interpretive strategy for investigating the modern condition, and as an engaged alternative to mainstream Western thought. Using the life and work of nineteenth-century Indian Muslim polymath Khan (1817-1898), it identifies Muslims as a viable resource for both critical intervention in important ethical debates of our times and as legitimate participants in humanistic discourses that underpin a just global order.
Islam as Critique locates Khan within a broader strain in modern Islamic thought that is neither a rejection of the West, nor a wholesale acceptance of it. The author calls this “Critical Islam”. By bringing Khan's critical engagement with modernity into conversation with similar critical analyses of the modern by Reinhold Niebuhr, Hannah Arendt, and Alasdair MacIntyre, the author shows how Islam can be read as critique.
Offers a new way of considering Islam as a means of understanding modernity and the modern condition, in contrast to Western thought.
Demonstrates how Islam can be read as critique, by bringing the Muslim thinker Khan into conversation with with similar critical analyses of the modern by Reinhold Niebuhr, Hannah Arendt, and Alasdair MacIntyre
Offers a careful study of Khan's life, who has not been studied sufficiently in the Western world
Offers a new approach to the comparative study of religion
Prologue
Introduction
1. The Language of Reform
2. Modernism and Humanism
3. The Meaning and End of Time
4. The Viva Activa
5. Knowledge and Wisdom
Epilogue: Can the Muslims Speak?
Notes
Bibliography
Index
This provocative and thoughtful book will animate the interest of a range of scholars in Islamic Studies, South Asian Studies, Politics, Philosophy, and Postcolonial thought; it will also work as a great text to teach in courses on these and other topics.
Khurram Hussain's Islam as Critique: Sayyid Ahmad Khan and the Challenge of Modernity is an important and highly original book … The book's offerings are daring and original, and the style is engaging.
“This book is a welcome foray into uncharted territory. Hussain's ambition is to parallel and create a modern version of Sayyid Ahmad Khan's “mediated voice, the quintessentially Muslim voice, finding harmony in discord, and incorporating difference as an essential feature of a verdant, vigorous Islam”. The message is at once compelling and productive, making this a volume of intense interest to multiple audiences, within and beyond the academy.”
“In a world where ponderous and pretentious prose is an occupational hazard, Khurram Hussain is witty, even electric, writer, and a nimble and adventurous thinker. He is one of the few thinkers who could address both the absurdities and maddening realities of our long post-9/11 moment by treating the Islamic response to Western modernity not as an external but as an internal critique. Hussain shows that Sayyid Ahmad Khan, far from the figure of longstanding sympathetic and hostile caricatures, provides fertile resources for an Islamic, yet cosmopolitan, critique and reconstruction of modernity.”
Khurram Hussain is Assistant Professor in the Department of Religion Studies at Lehigh University, USA.