Ode to Islamic Studies: Its Allure, Its Danger, Its Power

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How to Cite: Curtis IV, E. (2014). Ode to Islamic Studies: Its Allure, Its Danger, Its Power. Bulletin for the Study of Religion, 43(4), 21–25.https://doi.org/10.1558/bsor.v43i4.21

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Islamic studies is more than a specialized field of academic study; it is a series of discourses that play important educational, social, and political roles in multiple settings both within and beyond the academy. No one party, especially not its chief academic practitioners, controls its scope or outcomes. Offering outlines multiple examples of institutional growth and discursive strength, this essay contends that any narrow definition of the field, especially polemical ones, ignores the power, the allure, and the danger of Islamic studies--and its centrality to contests over what it means to be human in the contemporary world.

  • type
    Image
  • created on
  • file format
    jpeg
  • file size
    27 KB
  • container title
    Bulletin for the Study of Religion
  • creator
    Edward E. Curtis IV
  • issn
    2041-1871 (Online)
  • issue
    43.4
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield, United Kingdom
  • rights
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • volume
  • doi