Islam Obscured

Daniel Martin Varisco’s Islam Obscured: The Rhetoric of Anthropological Representation provides a very sound and well-informed literary critique of Clifford Geertz’s Islam Observed (1968), Ernest Gellner’s Muslim Society (1981), Fatima Mernissi’s Beyond the Veil (1975), and Akbar Ahmed’s Discoverin...

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Autor principal: Timothy P. Daniels
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: International Institute of Islamic Thought 2008
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/a6b02f13fdbb42f2bcc545c343a0716e
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:a6b02f13fdbb42f2bcc545c343a0716e2021-12-02T19:41:16ZIslam Obscured10.35632/ajis.v25i2.14792690-37332690-3741https://doaj.org/article/a6b02f13fdbb42f2bcc545c343a0716e2008-04-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/1479https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3733https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3741 Daniel Martin Varisco’s Islam Obscured: The Rhetoric of Anthropological Representation provides a very sound and well-informed literary critique of Clifford Geertz’s Islam Observed (1968), Ernest Gellner’s Muslim Society (1981), Fatima Mernissi’s Beyond the Veil (1975), and Akbar Ahmed’s Discovering Islam (1988). The author, an experienced ethnographer of Middle Eastern societies, examines the treatments and representations of Islam in these seminal texts. After presenting his topic and background in the introduction, he demonstrates how these four authors obscured, misrepresented, and elided the everyday lives of Muslims. In the epilogue, Varisco gleans some important lessons for the study of Islam from his entertaining and witty exploration of these social science texts. In the book’s introduction, the author briefly discusses the intellectual history of anthropology and ethnographic studies of Muslims. He notes that the discipline of anthropology has encountered numerous problems, including its recognition of Victorian traveler’s reports, Spencerian “evolutionism,” and the postcolonial critique of Eurocentric textual representations of non-western others. Addressing the current state of anthropological theory, Varisco mentions the blurring of boundaries between established disciplines as well as the particularly American problem over whether to maintain the four-field approach of holistically studying human beings. In keeping with this Eurocentric slant toward “primitives,” he observes that there were very few ethnographic studies of Muslims, except Evans- Pritchard’s 1940s work on Cyrenaican Bedouins and those by others following his example, until ethnographers began to produce Robert Redfieldinfluenced community studies.Yetmany of these latter studies were done by researchers who, with little proficiency inArabic, wrote from a distance and thus barely penetrated the surface of Islam in local Muslims’ lives. Varisco ... Timothy P. DanielsInternational Institute of Islamic ThoughtarticleIslamBP1-253ENAmerican Journal of Islam and Society, Vol 25, Iss 2 (2008)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Islam
BP1-253
spellingShingle Islam
BP1-253
Timothy P. Daniels
Islam Obscured
description Daniel Martin Varisco’s Islam Obscured: The Rhetoric of Anthropological Representation provides a very sound and well-informed literary critique of Clifford Geertz’s Islam Observed (1968), Ernest Gellner’s Muslim Society (1981), Fatima Mernissi’s Beyond the Veil (1975), and Akbar Ahmed’s Discovering Islam (1988). The author, an experienced ethnographer of Middle Eastern societies, examines the treatments and representations of Islam in these seminal texts. After presenting his topic and background in the introduction, he demonstrates how these four authors obscured, misrepresented, and elided the everyday lives of Muslims. In the epilogue, Varisco gleans some important lessons for the study of Islam from his entertaining and witty exploration of these social science texts. In the book’s introduction, the author briefly discusses the intellectual history of anthropology and ethnographic studies of Muslims. He notes that the discipline of anthropology has encountered numerous problems, including its recognition of Victorian traveler’s reports, Spencerian “evolutionism,” and the postcolonial critique of Eurocentric textual representations of non-western others. Addressing the current state of anthropological theory, Varisco mentions the blurring of boundaries between established disciplines as well as the particularly American problem over whether to maintain the four-field approach of holistically studying human beings. In keeping with this Eurocentric slant toward “primitives,” he observes that there were very few ethnographic studies of Muslims, except Evans- Pritchard’s 1940s work on Cyrenaican Bedouins and those by others following his example, until ethnographers began to produce Robert Redfieldinfluenced community studies.Yetmany of these latter studies were done by researchers who, with little proficiency inArabic, wrote from a distance and thus barely penetrated the surface of Islam in local Muslims’ lives. Varisco ...
format article
author Timothy P. Daniels
author_facet Timothy P. Daniels
author_sort Timothy P. Daniels
title Islam Obscured
title_short Islam Obscured
title_full Islam Obscured
title_fullStr Islam Obscured
title_full_unstemmed Islam Obscured
title_sort islam obscured
publisher International Institute of Islamic Thought
publishDate 2008
url https://doaj.org/article/a6b02f13fdbb42f2bcc545c343a0716e
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