The book under
review is therefore an exercise in contemporary intellectual history. After a
critical first chapter that considers the methodological problem of how to
write an intellectual history of the contemporary Muslim world supplemented
with a second chapter on theories relating to the study of Islam, the book
comprises another ten chapters. Three chapters each are devoted to the
thinkers: one on their intellectual biography and two on elements of their
thought and engagement with the modern. The final chapter is a conclusion that
brings them together and considers the very notion of a new Muslim intellectual;
it would have been useful to see how the author might consider the transmission
to a next generation of thinkers and consider the impact of these thinks. The
structure of the book might have been clearer if the author had decided to
divide the chapters into four sections and a conclusion: preliminaries on
theory and method, on Madjid, on Hanafi, and on Arkoun.
In the introduction,
Kersten states that any contemporary intellectual history will definitely be
influenced by the major trends in the study of religion and Islam today
including secularization theory and Orientalism, taking along the way notions
of discourse, Foucault and Derrida. However, the real frame for the study of
these three figures that Kersten suggests is Russell McCutcheon’s rather
nominalist study of religion (responding to the essentialist phenomenology of
the so-called Chicago school exemplified by Mircea Eliade). It is therefore
little surprise that in the next chapter on his theoretical approach, the
author embraces the position of Gavin Flood on the study of religion in a
similarly post-phenomenological mode. The contemporary study of Islamic thought
certainly does seem to fall into the tripartite division of theological
engagement or apologetics, phenomenology, and critique – and just like the
historians of Islam and the phenomenologists, they all seem to be taking about
different things or certainly different senses of religiosity. However, the
pitfall of the McCutcheon approach could be a reduction of the category of
religion to just another social formation might imply that a better frame for
studying these three figures could be postcolonialism or even Marxism. Others
like Armando Salvatore have read contemporary Islam thought through the prism
of Habermas and debates on religion in the public sphere, and others like
Andrew March have concerned themselves with contemporary political thought and
the applicability of Rawls and the liberal tradition. The question is how does
one deal with a category of religion or of Islam or the Islamic heritage that may
be useful across three very different cultural contexts concerning thinkers
with quite different intellectual influences and spaces for agency. This second
chapter is the theoretical heart of the book. It suggests a method that retains
elements of phenomenological engagement and hermeneutics (drawn from Ricoeur),
but still insists upon a critical distance from the subject and a desire to
found a hermeneutics, of explanation, of understanding, that brings together
this previous tradition with a narrativist and a dialogic approach. But then in
a world in which the ‘myth of objectivity’ is ever more a given, then surely
the method that we adopt in any social science by definition tends to be one
that embraces multiple, overlapping subjectivities. While it is not entirely
well integrated into the rest of the book (although to an extent it explains
why the use of the terms cosmopolitan and heretic in the title are not merely
sensationalist), this chapter is an excellent theoretical inquiry into the
study of religion. Critically, it not only abandons an essentialist reading of
religion as a timeless set of doctrines, practices and rituals, but also
distances itself from postmodernist approaches to religion by holding onto the
category of religion as a meaningful concept and signifier. These concerns
about method are then applied to the three thinkers lightly – and it is clear
that they are engaged not just as Islamic thinkers within their traditions but
are read as interlocutors within debates about the study of religion per se. However, it is worth noting that students and non-specialists will find the theory chapter rather heavy going.
The first thinker,
Nurcholish Madjid (d. 2005) better known as Cak Nur, was a leading liberal
thinker in Indonesia, initially trained in pesantren and who later obtained a
doctorate from the University of Chicago where he was a student of one of the
leading Muslim modernists of the twentieth century (and a thinker who demands a
serious monographic study), Fazlur Rahman (d. 1988). Kersten locates him within
two frames: first, Indonesian thought that often seems torn between engaging
with the larger Muslim universalism and the particularism of Javanese
ecumenism, and second, within a group of reforming hybrid thinkers that
included Harun Nasution (the famous proponent of Islam rasional) who were trained in the new Islamic universities
(IAIN network) that were originally inspired by al-Azhar but increasingly
influenced by (neo-)modernist thought. Cak Nur was much more than just a
modernist; he embraced secularisation theory as relevant to Islam and strongly
rejected Islamism and the demands for an Islamic state. He went to Chicago to
take part in the project on Islam and social change led by Leonard Binder and
Fazlur Rahman. The dissertation that he wrote under the direction of Rahman was
on the theology of Ibn Taymiyya attempting to rethink the relationship between
reason and revelation and indicates Madjid’s location within a group of
Indonesian thinkers self-styled as neo-Muʿtazilī and studied by Richard Martin.
The influence of Rahman’s own project of Islamic renaissance founded upon the
study of philosophy and philosophical hermeneutics was clear; often called the
double-movement theory, this involved a contextualised reading of scripture to
derive ethical norms in search of a normative Islam that could be transposed
into the present. Cak Nur applied that approach to the study of Ibn Taymiyya in
whom he saw a fellow reformer and kindred spirit who was quite different from
the godfather of violence and forebear of the modern Salafī movement in which
many locate him. His own project (especially Islam: Doctrine and Civilization in 1992) culminated in work
advocating pluralism, cosmopolitanism and a humanist hermeneutics of Islam,
eschewing both a simple compatibilist modernism and the revivalist
neo-fundamentalism. His engagement with the intellectual traditions of Islam
also placed him at odds with most modernists.
Hasan Hanafi, one
of the most prominent contemporary Arab intellectuals, trained as a philosopher
in Cairo and Paris. Beginning his intellectual career as a member of the Muslim
Brotherhood engaged in the modernist project and disillusioned with the
tradition of Islamic philosophy that seemed ethically impoverished and lacking
in social conscience, he has become more of a phenomenologist. An extremely
prolific writer, he is a leading critic of Islamisms and of various tendencies
in contemporary Islamic thought. He is the only one of the three thinkers still
alive and, arguably, still evolving his thought. His interest in Islam is less
with the vertical relationship with the divine and more with the horizontal and
social relationship between humans. The approach to theology is therefore
concerned with the communal and social sphere and not the doctrinal. Kersten
compares Hanafi’s study in Paris to Iqbal’s in Heidelberg a generation or so
earlier. Iqbal’s own modernism and desire for intellectual revival that was
socially embedded and his flirtation with German idealism appealed to Hanafi
and partly accounted for Hanafi’s own turn towards the phenomenology of first
Heidegger and then Husserl. This is an interesting line of inquiry. Iqbal is
certainly a major figure of modern Islamic thought but far too much attention
has confined him to his South Asian context and failed to locate him within
tendencies in wider Islamic thought. Hanafi’s primary concern has been with
method, how to apply his existential phenomenology and third-worldism to the
present problems of Islam. Thus his approach to reading the Islamic traditions
is to approach them as method and not doctrine, reminiscent of Ricoeur’s own use of Husserl. Any revival of the Islamic traditions requires a hermeneutical
approach and an engaged political consciousness. This often involves a radical
approach that he might consider to be cosmopolitan but others see as heretical.
The key feature that he shares with Cak Nur is the identification of the task
of the contemporary intellectual as that of enlightenment – and hence his championing
of Ibn Rushd.
Mohammed Arkoun (d.
2010) shared with the other two thinkers a deep concern with reviving or
establishing an Islamic humanism. Trained in Paris like Hanafi, he began as a
medievalist interested in the anthropological insights of Levi-Strauss and the
hermeneutics of French post-structuralists. Arkoun’s critique of the field
involved not only a deconstruction of traditional orientalism but also of
‘islamic reason’ within a project that he initially called ‘applied
islamology’. A historical approach to the tradition led him to engage
extensively with what he considered to be the ‘unthought’ in Islamic thought.
Just like Hanafi, he has also had an impact in Indonesia – and it seems that
while it is not explicit, Kersten’s choice of these three thinkers has much to
do with the Indonesian context in which much of the research was conducted. In
fact, in the final chapter, the rather brief conclusion, Kersten makes it clear
that the new Muslim intellectualism that is the focus on this study has found
its most enthusiastic reception in Indonesia. But this does not factor in the
importance of these thinkers in diasporas and among Muslim communities in the
West. But in many ways, the book offers an excellent corrective to the Middle
East focused bias of Islamic studies and is a strong advocate for a serious
study of South East Asian studies. It is refreshing to see a ‘view from the
edge’, especially given the demographic and institutional significance of
Indonesia. However, this also leads to gaps – Hanafi should be located more
within Arab and especially Egyptian contexts, and Arkoun in North African and
francophone ones. While the Indonesian embrace of ‘intellectualism’ is
important, the significance and impact of what happens in Egypt, Iran and
Turkey is probably greater – and more studied, which may account for this
approach. Even Iraq and parts of the Gulf are emerging as significant
intellectually, though the concept of a public intellectual in the Gulf remains
problematic. Kersten’s work therefore deserves to be read alongside other
modern intellectual histories present in the work of Aziz al-Azmeh, Mona Abaza,
and the late Ibrahim Abu-Rabiʿ among others.
Kersten summarises
the contribution of these thinkers in four points. First, all of them are
interested in the key relationship between tradition and modernity mediated by
the concept of authenticity that is central to contemporary life – all of us
tend to be concerned with living a life that is true to oneself, of authentic
being (and an excellent discussion of this is Charles Guignon). Re-orienting the focus upon authenticity allows one to overcome the history consequentialism and binarism of tradition and modernity especially given the presence of both in the contemporary. Second, they are all committed to the central role of reason in Islamic thought and can be placed within a movement that one may classify as neo-Muʿtazilī. Third, they are committed to humanism and an anthropocentric approach to
religion - the key to a contemporary Islamic theology is to reorient the focus away from the vertical to the horizontal, from the esoterica of the divine nature to the ephemeral mysteries of the human. After all, God does not need defending (despite the hysteria of many contemporary media conflicts and violent demonstrations in the present) but humans do require protection from their fellows. Finally, they are all opposed to Islamisms and the conflation of
religion and state; Islam as identity, public discourse, doctrine, and public ritual does not necessarily need to be reified and reduced to a constitutional privilege.
One of the key issues is how to gauge the impact of these thinkers and that remains an open question that requires a serious engagement with what is happening today. Where are the legacies of these thinkers? What constitutes the next generation? Kersten’s intellectual history has prepared the ground for such a critical endeavour and is to be congratulated for such a thoughtful and thought-provoking book.
One of the key issues is how to gauge the impact of these thinkers and that remains an open question that requires a serious engagement with what is happening today. Where are the legacies of these thinkers? What constitutes the next generation? Kersten’s intellectual history has prepared the ground for such a critical endeavour and is to be congratulated for such a thoughtful and thought-provoking book.
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