Islam: A Short History

By: Karen ArmstrongContributor(s): ARMSTRONG (Karen)Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publisher: London Phoenix 2000Description: xxxii,192 p. PB 19.7x12.7 cmISBN: 9781842125830Subject(s): Islam | Islamic EmpireDDC classification: 297.09 Summary: One of the world's foremost commentators on religious affairs on the history (and destiny) of the world's most misunderstood religion. In the public mind, Islam is a religion of extremes: it is the world's fastest growing faith; more than three-quarters of the world's refugees are Islamic; it has produced government by authoritarian monarchies in Saudi Arabia and ultra-republicans in Iran. Whether we are reading about civil war in Algeria or Afghanistan, the struggle for the soul of Turkey, or political turmoil in Pakistan or Malaysia, the Islamic context permeates all these situations. ISLAM shows how this progressive legacy is today often set aside as the faith struggles to come to terms with the economic and political weakness of most of its believers and with the forces of modernity itself.
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Item type Current location Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
Donated Books Donated Books St Aloysius College (Autonomous)
Others 297.09 ARMI (Browse shelf) Available Donated by V.T. Rajshekar D05954
Total holds: 0

One of the world's foremost commentators on religious affairs on the history (and destiny) of the world's most misunderstood religion.
In the public mind, Islam is a religion of extremes: it is the world's fastest growing faith; more than three-quarters of the world's refugees are Islamic; it has produced government by authoritarian monarchies in Saudi Arabia and ultra-republicans in Iran. Whether we are reading about civil war in Algeria or Afghanistan, the struggle for the soul of Turkey, or political turmoil in Pakistan or Malaysia, the Islamic context permeates all these situations.
ISLAM shows how this progressive legacy is today often set aside as the faith struggles to come to terms with the economic and political weakness of most of its believers and with the forces of modernity itself.

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