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5 - Reflections on Ernst and Martin's Rethinking Islamic Studies

Aaron W. Hughes
Affiliation:
University of Rochester
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Summary

Previous chapters have witnessed the quest for the “authentic” Muhammad and the “real” message of an authentic Muhammadan teaching on gender equality. The methodological support for these positions emerges from the fairly simple claim that their authors are accurately reading the sources or consulting as many texts as possible. The reader, in other words, is to take comfort in the scholar's ability to immerse him- or herself in a rather arcane and not always easily accessible body of texts written in Arabic and other Islamic languages. Expertise, and the personal and institutional authority that flows from it, is largely defined by the ability to “translate” these sources into a pleasing idiom for as large a reading audience as possible and, moreover, in such a manner that the “real” Islam is presented fairly and so that it functions as a corrective to hostile or negative portrayals.

In the various works examined above, there has been very little, let alone any systematic, attention to meta-questions of method and theory. The manifold and complex interconnections between these two terms, including all that they stand for, create the scholar of religion's conceptual workshop (Smith 2004). The academic study of religion, when it works best, is a highly theoretical, critical, and self-reflexive discipline that must square insider accounts of what they consider “religion” (or, even better, “religious experience”) really means with a set of accounts provided from other disciplines associated with the humanities and social sciences.

Type
Chapter
Information
Theorizing Islam
Disciplinary Deconstruction and Reconstruction
, pp. 100 - 117
Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2012

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