Breaking the Monolith: Essays, Articles and Columns on Islam, India, Terror and Other Things That Annoy Me (Imprintone)
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1
Ziauddin Sardar

Breaking the Monolith: Essays, Articles and Columns on Islam, India, Terror and Other Things That Annoy Me (2008)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Indien HC NW

ISBN: 9788188861057 bzw. 8188861057, Sprache unbekannt, Cambridge University Press, gebundenes Buch, neu.

22,83 ($ 24,95)¹ + Versand: 3,66 ($ 4,00)¹ = 26,49 ($ 28,95)¹
unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Indien, शिपिंग लागत के लिए: IND.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2008. Ziauddin Sardar is one of the world´s leading Muslim intellectuals and author of more than forty books on science, religion and contemporary culture. Breaking the Monolith, a collection of his essays and articles published in western journals, involves issues of terrorism and representation, the arrogance of American power, the dumbing power of mass culture, and of monolithic thought, in all its guises, from East and West. And, inevitably, they deal with the loss of innocence, with Islam and South Asia, and the collective failure of imagination. Part One, The Sphere of Islam sets the parameters. We cannot ignore a brutal fact, Sardar says: öIn the war on terror that shrouds the globe, the terrorists are Muslim which gives credence to that oft-repeated cliché, `all Muslims are not terrorists, but all terrorists happen to be Muslims´ö. What is the picture of Islam in the common mind? “ The spectre of al-Qaeda, its savagery and declared intentions to world domination; Taliban and their barbarity; suicide bombers fighting `a jihad´; the mad Mullah hell-bent on seizing power and using all means to justify his ends; colonels and generals legitimizing their illegitimate political authority to create an Islamic stateö. The picture that emerges is a creed knee-deep in obscurantism and terrorism, decay and darkness, with violence and extremism as its hallmarks. Why has Islam passed its “sell-byö date, Sardar asks? “Because it has been kept `refrigerated´ for too long. And I say this as a believer! It seems to me that believers have become empty vessels who accept anything that is poured into them by religious scholars in the name of Islam, without question and without criticismö. If Islam is out of sync with the contemporary world, America rides roughshod because of its brutal power, reinforced by neoliberal novelists and writers who see American free liberalism as the best of all possible worlds. The world is now too complex, too interconnected, too globalised to be divided into `black´ and `white´: ´the abode of Islam´ and `the abode of unbelief´. The overall message is break the monolith wherever it comes from. . First Edition. Hard Cover. New/New. 140 x 220 Mm.
2
Zidauddin Sardar

Breaking the Monolith: Essays, Articles and Columns on Islam, India, Terror and Other Things That Annoy Me (2008)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Indien HC NW

ISBN: 9788188861057 bzw. 8188861057, Sprache unbekannt, Cambridge University Press/ ImprintOne, gebundenes Buch, neu.

22,76 ($ 24,88)¹ + Versand: 2,74 ($ 3,00)¹ = 25,50 ($ 27,88)¹
unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Indien, शिपिंग लागत के लिए: IND.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, BookVistas.
Cambridge University Press/ ImprintOne, 2008. First edition. Hardcover. New. Ziauddin Sardar is one of the world's leading Muslim intellectuals and author of more than forty books on science, religion and contemporary culture. Breaking the Monolith, a collection of his essays and articles published in western journals, involves issues of terrorism and representation, the arrogance of American power, the dumbing power of mass culture, and of monolithic thought, in all its guises, from East and West. And, inevitably, they deal with the loss of innocence, with Islam and South Asia, and the collective failure of imagination. Part One, The Sphere of Islam sets the parameters. We cannot ignore a brutal fact, Sardar says: ”In the war on terror that shrouds the globe, the terrorists are Muslim which gives credence to that oft-repeated cliché, ‘all Muslims are not terrorists, but all terrorists happen to be Muslims'”. What is the picture of Islam in the common mind? “ The spectre of al-Qaeda, its savagery and declared intentions to world domination; Taliban and their barbarity; suicide bombers fighting ‘a jihad'; the mad Mullah hell-bent on seizing power and using all means to justify his ends; colonels and generals legitimizing their illegitimate political authority to create an Islamic state”. The picture that emerges is a creed knee-deep in obscurantism and terrorism, decay and darkness, with violence and extremism as its hallmarks. Why has Islam passed its “sell-by” date, Sardar asks? “Because it has been kept ‘refrigerated' for too long. And I say this as a believer! It seems to me that believers have become empty vessels who accept anything that is poured into them by religious scholars in the name of Islam, without question and without criticism”. If Islam is out of sync with the contemporary world, America rides roughshod because of its brutal power, reinforced by neoliberal novelists and writers who see American free liberalism as the best of all possible worlds. The world is now too complex, too interconnected, too globalised to be divided into ‘black' and ‘white': 'the abode of Islam' and ‘the abode of unbelief'. The overall message is break the monolith wherever it comes from. Contents Introduction Part One: The Sphere of Islam Part Two: The Circumference of Representation Part Three: The Circle of Terror Part Four: The Parameters of Culture Part Five: The Tangents of South Asian Experience Part Six: Interviews Epilogue Acknowledgements Printed Pages: 464.
3
Zidauddin Sardar

Breaking the Monolith: Essays, Articles and Columns on Islam, India, Terror and Other Things That Annoy Me (2008)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Indien HC NW

ISBN: 9788188861057 bzw. 8188861057, Sprache unbekannt, Cambridge University Press/ ImprintOne, gebundenes Buch, neu.

22,76 ($ 24,88)¹ + Versand: 1,83 ($ 2,00)¹ = 24,59 ($ 26,88)¹
unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Indien, शिपिंग लागत के लिए: IND.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, A - Z Books.
Cambridge University Press/ ImprintOne, 2008. First edition. Hardcover. New. Ziauddin Sardar is one of the world's leading Muslim intellectuals and author of more than forty books on science, religion and contemporary culture. Breaking the Monolith, a collection of his essays and articles published in western journals, involves issues of terrorism and representation, the arrogance of American power, the dumbing power of mass culture, and of monolithic thought, in all its guises, from East and West. And, inevitably, they deal with the loss of innocence, with Islam and South Asia, and the collective failure of imagination. Part One, The Sphere of Islam sets the parameters. We cannot ignore a brutal fact, Sardar says: ”In the war on terror that shrouds the globe, the terrorists are Muslim which gives credence to that oft-repeated cliché, ‘all Muslims are not terrorists, but all terrorists happen to be Muslims'”. What is the picture of Islam in the common mind? “ The spectre of al-Qaeda, its savagery and declared intentions to world domination; Taliban and their barbarity; suicide bombers fighting ‘a jihad'; the mad Mullah hell-bent on seizing power and using all means to justify his ends; colonels and generals legitimizing their illegitimate political authority to create an Islamic state”. The picture that emerges is a creed knee-deep in obscurantism and terrorism, decay and darkness, with violence and extremism as its hallmarks. Why has Islam passed its “sell-by” date, Sardar asks? “Because it has been kept ‘refrigerated' for too long. And I say this as a believer! It seems to me that believers have become empty vessels who accept anything that is poured into them by religious scholars in the name of Islam, without question and without criticism”. If Islam is out of sync with the contemporary world, America rides roughshod because of its brutal power, reinforced by neoliberal novelists and writers who see American free liberalism as the best of all possible worlds. The world is now too complex, too interconnected, too globalised to be divided into ‘black' and ‘white': 'the abode of Islam' and ‘the abode of unbelief'. The overall message is break the monolith wherever it comes from. Contents Introduction Part One: The Sphere of Islam Part Two: The Circumference of Representation Part Three: The Circle of Terror Part Four: The Parameters of Culture Part Five: The Tangents of South Asian Experience Part Six: Interviews Epilogue Acknowledgements Printed Pages: 464.
4
Ziauddin Sardar

Breaking the Monolith: Essays, Articles and Columns on Islam, India, Terror and Other Things That Annoy Me (2008)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika HC NW FE

ISBN: 9788188861057 bzw. 8188861057, Sprache unbekannt, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, gebundenes Buch, neu, Erstausgabe, mit Einband.

20,54 ($ 22,45)¹ + Versand: 1,24 ($ 1,36)¹ = 21,78 ($ 23,81)¹
unverbindlich
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt. Ltd [4059398], New Delhi, DELHI, India.
Ziauddin Sardar is one of the world´s leading Muslim intellectuals and author of more than forty books on science, religion and contemporary culture. Breaking the Monolith, a collection of his essays and articles published in western journals, involves issues of terrorism and representation, the arrogance of American power, the dumbing power of mass culture, and of monolithic thought, in all its guises, from East and West. And, inevitably, they deal with the loss of innocence, with Islam and South Asia, and the collective failure of imagination. Part One, The Sphere of Islam sets the parameters. We cannot ignore a brutal fact, Sardar says: "In the war on terror that shrouds the globe, the terrorists are Muslim which gives credence to that oft-repeated cliché, `all Muslims are not terrorists, but all terrorists happen to be Muslims´". What is the picture of Islam in the common mind? " The spectre of al-Qaeda, its savagery and declared intentions to world domination; Taliban and their barbarity; suicide bombers fighting `a jihad´; the mad Mullah hell-bent on seizing power and using all means to justify his ends; colonels and generals legitimizing their illegitimate political authority to create an Islamic state". The picture that emerges is a creed knee-deep in obscurantism and terrorism, decay and darkness, with violence and extremism as its hallmarks. Why has Islam passed its "sell-by" date, Sardar asks? "Because it has been kept `refrigerated´ for too long. And I say this as a believer! It seems to me that believers have become empty vessels who accept anything that is poured into them by religious scholars in the name of Islam, without question and without criticism". If Islam is out of sync with the contemporary world, America rides roughshod because of its brutal power, reinforced by neoliberal novelists and writers who see American free liberalism as the best of all possible worlds. The world is now too complex, too interconnected, too globalised to be divided into `black´ and `white´: ´the abode of Islam´ and `the abode of unbelief´. The overall message is break the monolith wherever it comes from. Contents Introduction Part One: The Sphere of Islam Part Two: The Circumference of Representation Part Three: The Circle of Terror Part Four: The Parameters of Culture Part Five: The Tangents of South Asian Experience Part Six: Interviews Epilogue Acknowledgements. Printed Pages: 464. Size: 140 x 220 Mm.
5
Zidauddin Sardar

Breaking the Monolith: Essays, Articles and Columns on Islam, India, Terror and Other Things That Annoy Me (2008)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika HC NW FE

ISBN: 9788188861057 bzw. 8188861057, Sprache unbekannt, Cambridge University Press/ ImprintOne, gebundenes Buch, neu, Erstausgabe.

22,76 ($ 24,88)¹ + Versand: 1,98 ($ 2,16)¹ = 24,74 ($ 27,04)¹
unverbindlich
Von Händler/Antiquariat, A - Z Books [61818224], New Delhi, DELHI, India.
Ziauddin Sardar is one of the world's leading Muslim intellectuals and author of more than forty books on science, religion and contemporary culture. Breaking the Monolith, a collection of his essays and articles published in western journals, involves issues of terrorism and representation, the arrogance of American power, the dumbing power of mass culture, and of monolithic thought, in all its guises, from East and West. And, inevitably, they deal with the loss of innocence, with Islam and South Asia, and the collective failure of imagination. Part One, The Sphere of Islam sets the parameters. We cannot ignore a brutal fact, Sardar says: ”In the war on terror that shrouds the globe, the terrorists are Muslim which gives credence to that oft-repeated clichö, ‘all Muslims are not terrorists, but all terrorists happen to be Muslims'”. What is the picture of Islam in the common mind? “ The spectre of al-Qaeda, its savagery and declared intentions to world domination; Taliban and their barbarity; suicide bombers fighting ‘a jihad'; the mad Mullah hell-bent on seizing power and using all means to justify his ends; colonels and generals legitimizing their illegitimate political authority to create an Islamic state”. The picture that emerges is a creed knee-deep in obscurantism and terrorism, decay and darkness, with violence and extremism as its hallmarks. Why has Islam passed its “sell-by” date, Sardar asks? “Because it has been kept ‘refrigerated' for too long. And I say this as a believer! It seems to me that believers have become empty vessels who accept anything that is poured into them by religious scholars in the name of Islam, without question and without criticism”. If Islam is out of sync with the contemporary world, America rides roughshod because of its brutal power, reinforced by neoliberal novelists and writers who see American free liberalism as the best of all possible worlds. The world is now too complex, too interconnected, too globalised to be divided into ‘black' and ‘white': 'the abode of Islam' and ‘the abode of unbelief'. The overall message is break the monolith wherever it comes from. Contents Introduction Part One: The Sphere of Islam Part Two: The Circumference of Representation Part Three: The Circle of Terror Part Four: The Parameters of Culture Part Five: The Tangents of South Asian Experience Part Six: Interviews Epilogue Acknowledgements Printed Pages: 464.
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