Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Loss of Memory, Loss of Focus: Geiger, Said, and the Search for Missing Origins
- Chapter 2 The Invention of the Middle East: Religion and the Quest for Understanding the Muslim Mind
- Chapter 3 Tensions Past, Tensions Future: Middle Eastern Studies Confronts Religious Studies
- Chapter 4 We Study Muslim Constructions, Not Muslims, Right?
- Chapter 5 The Implosion of a Discipline: 9/11 and the Islamic Studies Scholar as Media Expert
- Conclusion: Towards a Future Imperfect
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Subject Index
- Index of Names
Chapter 5 - The Implosion of a Discipline: 9/11 and the Islamic Studies Scholar as Media Expert
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Loss of Memory, Loss of Focus: Geiger, Said, and the Search for Missing Origins
- Chapter 2 The Invention of the Middle East: Religion and the Quest for Understanding the Muslim Mind
- Chapter 3 Tensions Past, Tensions Future: Middle Eastern Studies Confronts Religious Studies
- Chapter 4 We Study Muslim Constructions, Not Muslims, Right?
- Chapter 5 The Implosion of a Discipline: 9/11 and the Islamic Studies Scholar as Media Expert
- Conclusion: Towards a Future Imperfect
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Subject Index
- Index of Names
Summary
Well, I fin'ly started thinking straight
When I run out of things to investigate
Couldn't imagine doing anything else
So now I'm sitting home investigatin' myself!
Hope I don't find out anything…hmm great God!
(Bob Dylan)The discipline of Islamic studies has been effortlessly coasting in essentialist mode, happily subscribing to the nostalgia of authenticity and the touchstone of inner experience. This, despite several persuasive critiques mounted internally within religious studies to interrogate the genealogies and categorical assumptions to which the field has traditionally ascribed, and to which it continues to do so. Although this interrogation made little if no impact on the study of Islam, another event, one uncanny and not academic in the slightest, would create a sea-change in the ways that Islamicists perceived themselves and were perceived by others, not only inside the academy but also outside of it. The events of September 11, 2001, witnessed the transformation of many Islamicists from being specialists in often-arcane areas of medieval Islamic jurisprudence or philosophy to sudden experts in Islamic mentalities (a genealogy that should not come as a surprise given the subject matter of Chapter 2). As the media came calling, many Islamicists were hauled (often all too happily) in front of cameras to inform an ignorant public about the eternal truths of Islam and to establish the fact that those who perpetrated the attacks of 9/11 were not real Muslims.
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- Information
- Situating IslamThe Past and Future of an Academic Discipline, pp. 93 - 111Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2008