Preface |
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ix | |
1. Introduction: Islam: A Passage to the West |
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1 | (57) |
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The failure of political Islam: and what? |
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1 | (16) |
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17 | (4) |
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Acculturation and 'objectation' of Islam |
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21 | (5) |
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Recasting identities, westernising religiosity |
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26 | (3) |
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Where are the Muslim reformers? |
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29 | (4) |
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Crisis of authority and self-enunciation |
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33 | (2) |
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35 | (3) |
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38 | (2) |
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Secularisation through religion? |
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40 | (1) |
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Is jihad closer to Marx than to the Koran? |
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41 | (14) |
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What is Bin Laden's strategy? |
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55 | (3) |
2. Post-Islamism |
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58 | (42) |
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The failure of political Islam revisited |
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58 | (4) |
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From Islamism to nationalism |
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62 | (3) |
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States without nation, brothers without state |
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65 | (2) |
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67 | (2) |
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Islam is never a strategic factor as such |
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69 | (3) |
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The political integration of Islamists |
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72 | (3) |
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From utopia to conservatism |
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75 | (3) |
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The elusive 'Muslim vote' |
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78 | (2) |
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Democracy without democrats |
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80 | (3) |
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The Iranian Islamic revolution: how politics defines religion |
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83 | (5) |
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Islamisation as a factor of secularisation |
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88 | (4) |
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Conservative re-Islamisation |
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92 | (5) |
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Post-Islamism: the privatisation of religion |
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97 | (3) |
3. Muslims in the West |
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100 | (48) |
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How to live as a stateless Muslim minority |
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107 | (4) |
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Historical paradigms of Muslims as a minority |
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111 | (6) |
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Acculturation and identity reconstruction |
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117 | (31) |
4. The Triumph of the Religious Self |
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148 | (53) |
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The loss of religious authority and the 'objectification' of Islam |
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151 | (5) |
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Immigration and reformulation of Islam |
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156 | (2) |
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The crisis of authority and religious knowledge |
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158 | (13) |
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The religious market and the sociology of Islamic actors |
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171 | (4) |
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Individualisation of enunciation and propaganda |
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175 | (10) |
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185 | (2) |
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Humanism, ethical Islam and salvation |
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187 | (5) |
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192 | (5) |
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Recommunitarisation and construction of identity |
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197 | (4) |
5. Islam in the West or the Westernisation of Islam |
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201 | (31) |
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The building of Muslim 'churches' |
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201 | (19) |
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Neo-brotherhoods and New Age religiosity |
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220 | (12) |
6. The Modernity of an Archaic Way of Thinking: Neofundamentalism |
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232 | (58) |
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Sources and actors of neofundamentalism |
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234 | (9) |
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The basic tenets of neofundamentalism |
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243 | (4) |
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Neofundamentalists and Islamists |
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247 | (7) |
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Neofundamentalists and radical violence |
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254 | (3) |
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Why is neofundamentalism successful? |
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257 | (30) |
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The new frontier of the imagined ummah |
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287 | (3) |
7. On the Path to War: Bin Laden and Others |
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290 | (36) |
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Al Qaeda and the new terrorists |
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294 | (10) |
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304 | (4) |
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Re-Islamisation in the West |
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308 | (1) |
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Uprooting and acculturation |
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309 | (3) |
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312 | (3) |
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The Western-born or second generation Muslims |
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315 | (2) |
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The converts and the 'protest conversion' |
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317 | (2) |
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319 | (2) |
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321 | (5) |
8. Remapping the World: Civilisation, Religion and Strategy |
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326 | (15) |
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Culture, religion and civilisations: the conundrum of clash and dialogue |
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328 | (7) |
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335 | (2) |
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Military strategy on abstract territories |
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337 | (4) |
Index |
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341 | |