Preface
Contributors
Part One: Introduction
Chapter One: Post-Islamism at Large - Asef Bayat
Part Two: Critique From Within
Chapter Two: The Making of Post-Islamist Iran - Asef Bayat
Chapter Three: The AKP and Turkey's Post-Islamist Turn - Ihsan
Dagi
Chapter Four: Islam and the Retrenchment of the Secular Turkish
State - Cihan Tugal
Chapter Five: Moroccan Post-Islamism: Emerging Trend or Chimera? -
Sami Zemni
Chapter Six: Post-Islamist Politics in Indonesia - Noorhaidi
Hasan
Part Three: Change in Ambivalence
Chapter Seven: Egypt's Islamism and its Post-Islamist Revolution -
Asef Bayat
Chapter Eight: Hizbullah's Infitah: A Post-Islamist Turn? - Joseph
Alagha
Part Four: Critique From Without
Chapter Nine: Post-Islamist Strands in Pakistan: Islamist Spin-Offs
and Their Contradictory Trajectories - Humeira Iqtidar
Chapter Ten: Saudi Arabia and the Limits of Post-Islamism -
Stephane Lacroix
Part Five: Post-Islamism Always
Chapter Eleven: Islamism in Sudan: Before, After, in Between -
Abdelwahab El-Affendi
Chapter Twelve: Syria's Un-usual ''Islamic Trend'': Political
Reformists, the Ulama, and Democracy - Thomas Pierret
Index
Asef Bayat is the Catherine and Bruce Bastian Professor of Global and Transnational Studies and teaches sociology at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
"Despite the plethora of work on Islam and politics, few have
focused systematically and methodologically on the significant
transformations many of the Islamic movements are currently
experiencing. Post-Islamism fills a serious gap in the existing
literature and broadens our understanding of the transitions of
Islamic movements and the extent and implications of this change."
-- Emad El-Din Shahin, Professor of Public Policy at the School of
Global
Affairs and Public Policy at the American University in Cairo
"Post-Islamism provides a fresh and cogent analysis to one of the
most visible and important phenomena in Muslim politics. The
arguments and thoughts presented refute the essentialist vision of
Islamism as a stagnant and immutable phenomenon. It also
underscores that post-Islamism can be viewed as a "stage" between
the traditional Islamism and "something" that is still underway."
--Sociology of Islam
"...[A] compelling piece of scholarship." --Journal of Church and
State
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