Review:
"A bold and insightful study of the historical and contemporary uses and misuses of rhetorics of democracy, women's rights and sexualities in their deployments in relation to Islam--a rich important contribution to a growing body of such critical literature."--Leila Ahmed "author of A Quiet Revolution: the Veil's Resurgence, from the Middle East to America "
"This is a powerfully--often passionately--written text. . . . The only book that I can think of in comparison is Edward Said's Covering Islam--but Massad's book is far richer both in terms of the literature covered (much of which was of course not yet available when Said wrote his book) and the range of questions engaged."--Talal Asad "Graduate Center, City University of New York "
"In recent years we have come to take seriously the idea that certain othering concepts such as 'the Orient' and 'Islam' have played a vital role in giving reality to 'the West.' The extraordinary value of Massad's new book is that he has shown, through a sustained analysis of a wide variety of historical and contemporary discourses, that 'Islam' has been more than a periphery-defining concept utilized merely to lend truth and solidity to the Christian West. Far more importantly, 'Islam' has been at work as a powerful agonistic imaginary indispensable for the self-definition of the West's own polity as essentiallyfree. This is a deeply considered work that is more than timely."--Tomoko Masuzawa "University of Michigan "
"Massad is an important intellectual voice. He commands attention internationally. He offers distinctive, compelling, and often brilliant critiques of positions that many regard as sacrosanct: most notably the human rights regime, NGOS, and international development organizations, and does not spare the therapeutic enterprises of psychoanalysis and transcultural tolerance."
--Anne Norton "University of Pennsylvania "
"This indispensable compendium of rich, critical insights and readings is as learned as it is now necessary. Massad has recreated the scholarly and political context in which understanding of the relationships between Liberalism and Islam will be conducted."--Paul Gilroy "King's College London "
"Massad's contribution . . . is to posit Islam not as something in contention with liberalism--as a claim to a particularist set of values--but rather as formative of the liberal project itself. In this way Massad destabilizes a singularly European history of liberalism. An imagined Islam has always been present within this European project and any attempt to grapple with that project today must attend to the construction and elision of Islam at liberalism's core."--Kathleen Foody "Marginalia Review of Books "
"Islam in Liberalism is required reading for anyone invested in Muslim Studies. This book reminds us that in order to move beyond scholarship revolving around a simplistic binarism between West and non-West, we must never forget how this opposition has shaped and continues to actively influence scholarship today. Furthermore, studying 'Islam' requires unpacking this term, which has become a reified, catch-all signifier in much Western scholarship. More than that, though, it may suggest that some of what is called Muslim Studies is less about something called 'Islam' than it is about liberalism. Thus, anyone who seeks to study Islam within a Western context must also undertake, as a necessary correlate to Muslim Studies, something that might be called Liberalism Studies."--Los Angeles Review of Books
"This erudite, at times frustrating, but always challenging, work of scholarship should be essential reading for all scholars of Islam and Middle East politics."--Cambridge Review of International Affairs
"Islam in Liberalism is thus a crucial, timely, and inspiring study for critics of liberalism and for scholarship about Islam in political and social theory more generally. It is simultaneously a massive synthesis of numerous literatures and discourses about Islam, and an original, provocative reading of what unites constructions of Islam with definitions of liberalism."--Theory & Event
"Here's a book that Donald Trump should read. At the heart of Massad's Islam in Liberalism is a narrative about terms, translation and global imperialism. This empire is largely cultural but can turn territorial, and it belongs to the 'liberal' West. Massad argues, with relentless pace, that the West's drive to hegemony is supported by a series of images in political, media and scholarly discourse that position 'liberalism' and 'Islam' as antithetical to each other. . . . Massad's relentless interrogation of Western stereotypes of Islam, Muslims and the 'Muslim world' is much needed at a time when the Republican front-runner can win votes by subjecting Muslims to yet more demonization."--Theos
About the Author:
Joseph Massad is professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history in the Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies at Columbia University. He has written many books, including Desiring Arabs, also published by the University of Chicago Press.
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