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The Muslim Revolt: A Journey Through Political Islam (Columbia/Hurst) [Hardcover]

Roger Hardy
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

March 25, 2010 Columbia/Hurst

"We pay a high price when we fail to understand Islam," writes Roger Hardy in this timely guide. Designed for readers of all backgrounds, this book demystifies the phenomenon of Islamism and the forces that drive it, situating the movement within a clarifying history that views Islamism, for the last two hundred years, as the product of a war against Western domination and as a consequence of the disappointments of modernization.

Roger Hardy builds his narrative around personal travels and his encounters as a journalist covering Mideast and Islamic issues for more than three decades. He illuminates the political role of Islam in several distinct countries and regions: Egypt, Iran, Pakistan, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Southeast Asia, and Europe. At the same time, he unravels a history of Islamism from its origins in colonialism to its present manifestation in Al-Qaeda and global jihad. In a provocative conclusion, Hardy warns that without a more comprehensive understanding of Islamism, the West will forfeit its peace-brokering advantage and indeed lose the "hearts and minds" of Muslims.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Succinct and readable, this account demonstrates the regional and ideological diversity of political Islam even while explaining Muslims' malaise vis-à-vis the West.

(L. Carl Brown Foreign Affairs 9/1/10)

Demystifying Islam, understanding Islamism as well as the forces that drive it.

(The Economist 12/4/10)

Review

This admirably concise book by an experienced journalist takes us on a vivid journey through political Islam's different national and regional contexts—from Indonesia to Europe—and considers how less hostile relations between the West and Islam might be achieved. Roger Hardy successfully avoids superficial and stereotypical renderings and makes effective and informative use of direct quotations by political Islamists-a rare and difficult feat.

(John Chalcraft, London School of Economics )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Columbia University Press (March 25, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0231701500
  • ISBN-13: 978-0231701501
  • Product Dimensions: 0.8 x 5.2 x 7.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,424,398 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3.0 out of 5 stars Looking for the secular Muslim January 1, 2011
Format:Hardcover
"The Muslim Revolt: A Journey Through Political Islam" by Roger Hardy, (2010), small hardback, 230 pages. The author `worked as a Middle East and Islamic affairs analyst for the BBC World Service for over twenty years.' The author noted that Egypt seems to be a `malaise' today because "IN a much-debated phrase, Al-Ghazali and the religious scholars of his day [1400s] `closed the gates' of ijtihad" [reasoning] (p. 18) - essentially, Muslims stopped progressive/ scientific/ secular thinking. The author BRIEFLY reviews `modern' Islamists (Qutb, Banna) who argued against the secular/ liberal `westernization' of the Middle East. The author desires the `liberation', if not the `liberalization' of Islam - just enough to curtail the power of the stifling anti-secularists imams. The author interviews several Middle East scholars who want to liberalize the region by reducing the sharia-Islamist laws. The author reviews the Shia-Shia split since the Battle of Karbala, and the Shia overthrow of the Iranian shah in 1979. The author tries to explain how the conservative/ fundamentalist Islamists regained power over the reform-minded Khatami administration [it was Pres. George Bush's `fault' - because his `Axis of Evil' speech offended the conservative Shia!] (p. 53). The author reviews how "Pakistan is the only country created in the name of Islam" (59) with Jinnah (& Maududi), and how Gen. Zia ul-Haq Islamlicated it even more - shortly after Khomeini seduced Iran. The author reviews how the U.S. funded Pakistan to oppose the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan - and how the bin Laden versus Azzam split and assassination came to be. The author BRIEFLY reviews the origins of Wahhabism and the coup of Ibn Saud. While the book recounts some of the experiences of the author, it seems to be more of a pasting together of snippets of common-information from Wikipedia - I'm really trying to find the new originality of `substance' that the author has to provide. The author gives a BRIEF review as to how Ataturk ended the Ottoman empire and tried to de-Islamize Turkey, but now today the secularists are being pushed back by the Erbakan Islamists. The author briefly reviews the rise of Islamism in Indonesia-Malaysia during the 1990s. The author reviews the `Rushdie Affair' , the Danish Moontoons, and the growth of Londonistan. The author seems to be confused WHY Muslims living throughout Europe are not `integrating' or accepting the secular beliefs (i.e. becoming Westoxificated) of liberal Europe - he apparently doesn't see that the newly arrived Muslims want Europe to de-secularize by becoming Islamificated (180-184). For some unexplained reason the author maintains: "The mainstream [Muslim] wants to see the umma grow stronger vis-a-vis the West, but does not share the radical jihadi view of history as an unending conflict between believers and infidels" (200). This journalist-author SEES what is going on, but doesn't seem to realize how the Islamists' actions are tied in with the Islamic religion itself {for this understanding see Robert Spencer "The Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam"}. Just too 'generic'.
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