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17 - Secularism Beyond the State: The ‘State’ and the ‘Market’ in Islamist Imagination

from Part IV - Reform, State and Market

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2014

Humeira Iqtidar
Affiliation:
King's College
Filippo Osella
Affiliation:
University of Sussex
Caroline Osella
Affiliation:
University of London
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Summary

I am proposing only that we should abandon the state as a material object of study… while continuing to take the idea of the state extremely seriously.

(Abrams 1988: 75)

Islamists are defined as those among Muslim revivalists who focus on taking over the state—they certainly seem to take the state, both as an idea and as a material object, very seriously (see, for instance, Fuller 2003). However, even as taking over the state remains the proclaimed aim-prompting, in response, an alarmist discourse about the imminent dangers of an Islamist coup, actual strategies pursued over the last two decades have involved a subtle move away from the state as the locus for mobilizations. It is argued here that in rough alignment with the shift in global political imagination where the state is no longer the dominant mobilizer of political energies and projects, Islamist strategies belie a move towards using the market as an alternative engine for defining and facilitating moral and political change. This shift does not imply a complete break with the past and certainly at the rhetorical level the focus on the state continues. However, as shown below, increasingly marginalizing Maududi's vision of the state as the central agent of change in the modern world, contemporary Jamaat-e-Islami activists are grappling with the many contradictions in their relationship with the market as an engine for the formation and transformation of the moral community. Moreover, the idea of the market remains infused with conflicting sentiments.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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