Islam and Modernity: Reform Movements, Political Islam, and Identity
MTA
A comparative exploration of 19th–21st century responses to colonialism, state-building, and globalization
This book provides a comprehensive comparative analysis of how Muslim societies have engaged with modernity from the nineteenth century through the early twenty-first century. It rejects simplistic narratives of inherent conflict between Islam and modern values, instead emphasizing the dynamic and varied ways Muslim thinkers, activists, and communities have negotiated tradition and change in response to colonialism, state-building, industrial capitalism, globalization, and digital transformation. The work highlights internal diversity, showing that responses have ranged from reformist and revivalist currents to political Islamism, secular nationalism, and pragmatic post-Islamist approaches, all shaped by specific historical contexts and power dynamics.
Early chapters trace foundational intellectual movements, including Jamal al-Din al-Afghani’s Pan-Islamic call for unity and resistance, Muhammad Abduh and Rashid Rida’s Salafi reformist emphasis on ijtihad and educational renewal, Ottoman constitutionalist experiments blending Islamic principles with parliamentary governance, and South Asian modernists like Sir Syed Ahmad Khan and Muhammad Iqbal who redefined Muslim identity through education and philosophical innovation. The Iranian Constitutional Revolution is examined as a pivotal Shi‘i-led effort to reconcile clerical authority with modern notions of justice and popular sovereignty, setting the stage for later revolutionary thought.
The study then explores the rise of mass political Islam through organizations such as the Muslim Brotherhood and Jamaat-e-Islami, the transnational spread of Wahhabi-influenced ideas fueled by oil wealth since the 1970s, and the transformative impact of Iran’s 1979 Revolution on the global Shi‘i political imaginary. It analyzes diverse expressions of militancy and resistance, from anti-colonial jihads to the transnational networks of Al‑Qaeda and ISIS, alongside gradualist paths like electoral Islamism in Turkey and Tunisia. Throughout, the book delves into critical debates over law and ijtihad, gender and family reform, education and media, Islamic economics, human rights, and the evolving role of religious authority in a networked age, ultimately arguing that Islam and modernity have been co‑constituted through continuous negotiation, with no single definitive outcome but a spectrum of ongoing, contested paths.
This book is designed for students and scholars of Islamic studies, political science, history, and religious studies seeking a comprehensive comparative analysis of Muslim responses to modernity from the 19th to 21st centuries. It will also benefit policymakers, diplomats, and practitioners working in international relations, conflict resolution, or development who need nuanced historical context to understand contemporary Islamic movements, political actors, and state-society dynamics in Muslim-majority countries. General readers interested in the intellectual history of Islam and its complex engagement with modern ideas will find it an accessible yet substantive resource that moves beyond simplistic binaries of tradition versus modernity.
May 21, 2026
48,433 words
3 hours 24 minutes
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