2011’s Best Books—
Or Just a Great Reading List
Conversion, magic, flogging, the New Third World, Muslim philosophy, Malcolm. Compelling reading, in any year.
Read MoreConversion, magic, flogging, the New Third World, Muslim philosophy, Malcolm. Compelling reading, in any year.
Read MoreWhile a valiant effort at a compassionate depiction of individuals swept up in the horror of the Bosnian Genocide, Angelina Jolie’s main character, Danijel, simply ends up humanizing genocide.
Read MoreSpeaking on the NYPD spying scandal.
Read MoreThe inverse of the argument that Islam ‘causes’ terrorism is the idea that Islam could solve the problem. Either way, it’s undue focus on the religion.
Read MoreFerguson always manages to discover himself at the head of the next great cause; how convenient for him, and for whole countries.
Read More“This book is mainly about the problem of freedom in Islam. I argue that Islam, as its very core, is a religion that liberated the individual from the bond of the tribe and similar collective bodies. But I also show how the initial impetus of the faith was partly overshadowed as a result of some early theological controversies, and, moreover, political decisions. This also means that some of those early debates can be reopened, and coercive elements in Islamic law and culture can be reformed. And I am saying all these within a particularly Turkish outlook, as I explain the little known history of ‘Muslim liberalism’ that emerged in the late Ottoman Empire and modern-day Turkey.”
Read MoreA day in Queens, among ordinary Americans.
Read MoreWhat can you possibly say in response to Victoria Jackson’s Politichicks, a new right wing alternative to The View?
Read MoreIt’s far more meaningful to ask who is interpreting Shari’ah; think of the argument over ‘what the bible says’ and you begin to get an idea.
Read MoreIf we read the Arab Spring as a zero-sum game between Islamists and secularists, we’re going to miss what’s happening; if we imagine Arab democracy will look like secular Western democracy, we will likely be disappointed. And if we assume reference to Islam and democracy reveals only hypocrisy, insincerity, or ideological confusion, we’re likely to be surprised.
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