Case for Islamo-Christian Civilization
Material type:
- 0231127979
- 23 303.4821 BULC
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Notes | Barcode | |
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St Aloysius Library | History | 303.4821 BULC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | Donated by V.T. Rajshekar | D05965 |
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300 DENS Subaltern Urbanisation in India | 301.095405 JUDM Making of modern India: sociological explorations into postcolonial Indian modernity | 302.140954 AKKK Kandhamal Craves for Justice | 303.4821 BULC Case for Islamo-Christian Civilization | 305.51 OHAC Caste conflict and ideology | 307.72 RADC Charkha Gandhi and Rural Poverty | 320.513 VALI Indian thinkers: Modern and contemporary period |
Conventional wisdom maintains that the differences between Islam and Christianity are irreconcilable. Pre-eminent Middle East scholar Richard W. Bulliet disagrees, and in this fresh, provocative book he looks beneath the rhetoric of hatred and misunderstanding to challenge prevailing―and misleading―views of Islamic history and a "clash of civilizations." These sibling societies begin at the same time, go through the same developmental stages, and confront the same internal challenges. Yet as Christianity grows rich and powerful and less central to everyday life, Islam finds success around the globe but falls behind in wealth and power.
Modernization in the nineteenth century brings in secular forces that marginalize religion in political and public life. In the Christian world, this simply furthers a process that had already begun. In the Middle East this gives rise to the tyrannical governments that continue to dominate. Bulliet argues that beginning in the 1950s American policymakers misread the Muslim world and, instead of focusing on the growing discontent against the unpopular governments, saw only a forum for liberal, democratic reforms within those governments. By fostering slogans like "clash of civilizations" and "what went wrong," Americans to this day continue to misread the Muslim world and to miss the opportunity to focus on common ground for building lasting peace. This book offers a fresh perspective on U.S.-Muslim relations and provides the intellectual groundwork upon which to help build a peaceful and democratic future in the Muslim world.
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