Cover image for Multiple modernities, civil society and Islam : the case of Iran and Turkey
Title:
Multiple modernities, civil society and Islam : the case of Iran and Turkey
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Publication Information:
Liverpool : Liverpool University Press, 2006
ISBN:
9780853230892

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30000010105776 BP173.63 K35 2006 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Turkey and Iran consider themselves modern Islamic states - though with radically different status in today's social and political world. In Multiple Modernities, Civil Society and Islam, Kamali explores the historical factors that have shaped such dissimilar Muslim states, including the continued influence of Europe and the United States. Kamali's assertion that the "Muslim world" is far more multifaceted and pluralistic than generally portrayed is a message particularly relevant today. The attacks on the World Trade Centre in New York and the Pentagon in Washington DC are covertly and, in manycases, even overtly considered as "the clash of civilizations". It is presented as a sign of a conflict between the modern, democratic, and secularised civilization of the "Western world" and the traditional, non-democratic, and religious "Islamicworld". The post-September 11th changes have created an environment where human societies have been over-simplified, dividing the world into two "sides" along an axis of "us" and "them". This challenging study reveals that there is no "Islamic world", no single tradition of modernity, but multiple patterns of socio-political developments in different Muslim countries with both common features and differences.


Author Notes

Masoud Kamali is professor of sociology at Mitt Sweden University and at Center for Multiethnic Research, Uppsala University. He is currently leading a European project: "The European Dilemma: Institutional Patterns and Politics of 'Racial' Discrimination" in which eight European countries participate.


Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
1 Multiple Modernities and Social Theory
2 Islam, Civil Society and Modernization
3 'The West', Russia and the Modernization of Iran and Turkey
4 Constitutionalism and Revolutionary Movements
5 Authoritarian Modernization and the Emergence of the Modern Nation State
6 Political Tutelage and Democracy
7 Islam, the State and Civil Society
8 Islam and Democratic Development: Theoretical Challenges
Notes
References
Index