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== People Like Us (2007 book) == |
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People Like Us , published in 2007, is a book authored by the Muslim Australian academic, musician and former commercial lawyer [[Waleed Aly]]. |
People Like Us , published in 2007, is a book authored by the Muslim Australian academic, musician and former commercial lawyer [[Waleed Aly]]. |
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Revision as of 01:19, 8 June 2010
Author | Aly, Waleed |
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Language | English |
Subject | Islam and the West |
Genre | Religion |
Publisher | Pan Macmillan |
Publication date | 30th August, 2007 |
Publication place | Australia |
Media type | Paperback |
ISBN | 978 0 3304 2380 9 |
People Like Us , published in 2007, is a book authored by the Muslim Australian academic, musician and former commercial lawyer Waleed Aly.
Synopsis
People Like Us highlights the egocentricism and the "endless misunderstanding and mutual, cross civilisational ignorance" that - according to the author - pervade contemporary Islam-related attitudes and discourse. In the process it discusses issues such as the hijab, jihad, fundamentalism, radicalism, and secularism.
Chapters
1. A Danish snapshot
- Discusses the issues and events surrounding the Jyllans-Posten cartoons depicting the prophet Muhammad in order to illustrate the current state of affairs between Islam and the West.
2. How did we get here?
- Traces the history of Western attitudes to Islam, attitudes that - according to Aly - have often stemmed from ignorance and or misunderstanding.
3. Don't call me a moderate!
- Analyses the terms 'fundamentalism,' (for which a more useful and widely applicable definition is provided) and 'moderate' (which the author judges to be an "explicitly political" designation).
4. Save our secular souls
- Describes the many flavours of secularism, arguing that Western attitudes toward it have been shaped by Europe's personal experience of Church/State interaction. Aly contends that those who prescribe secularism as a cure for the Muslim world's ills fail to take into account Islam's unique history, and the fact that Islam lacks a 'Church' in the true sense.
5. Women as a battlefield
- Discusses the veil and Western perceptions of it, suggesting that these have been and continue to be influenced by the West's self-image.
6. The war on jihad
- Discusses in detail the concept of jihad, drawing a clear distinction between it and holy war.
7. What's so medieval about al-Qa'ida?
- Explains that radicalism and terrorism are modern phenomena, having much more in common with Bolshevism than medieval Islamic thought.
8. Reformists, Reformation and Renaissance
- Makes the claim that the 'Islamic Reformation' advocated by some Western commentators has already taken place, and has produced mixed results.
9. Seeking the human