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The Future of Islam 1st Edition

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 34 ratings

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John L. Esposito is one of America's leading authorities on Islam. Now, in this brilliant portrait of Islam today-- and tomorrow-- he draws on a lifetime of thought and research to provide an accurate, richly nuanced, and revelatory account of the fastest growing religion in the world.

Here Esposito explores the major questions and issues that face Islam in the 21st century and that will deeply affect global politics: Is Islam compatible with modern notions of democracy, rule of law, gender equality, and human rights? How representative and widespread is Islamic fundamentalism and the threat of global terrorism? Can Muslim minority communities be loyal citizens in America and Europe? The book also turns the mirror on the US and Europe, revealing how we appear to Muslims.

Recent decades have brought extraordinary changes in the Muslim world, and in addressing these issues, Esposito paints a complex picture of Islam in all its diversity-a picture of urgent importance as we face the challenges of the coming century.

John L. Esposito and Karen Armstrong: Author One-to-One
Karen Armstrong is the author of numerous works on comparative religion, including the critically-acclaimed
The Case for God. She spoke with John L. Esposito about Western perceptions of Muslims and the issues facing the world’s fastest growing religion.

Armstrong: How did you view Islam before you began to study it seriously? How did study affect your understanding of Muslim faith and culture?

Esposito: Growing up in Brooklyn, NY, surrounded by Italian Catholic neighbors, I knew little about the one Irish girl in my class, and much less about Arabs or Islam who were invisible in the American landscape. And what I did know (much of it, I discovered later, was the product of bias and stereotypes) did not attract me to “these strangers”. In addition, since most theology and religion departments did not teach Islam, the prospect of getting a teaching position in this area were indeed bleak. When the department chair of religion at Temple encouraged me to take a course in Islam with a newly hired Muslim professor, I declined. However, he was “gently adamant” and I, reflecting on my precarious position as a grad student, finally agreed to “take just one course.”

When I first encountered Islam in graduate school, I was astonished to discover that Islam was another Abrahamic faith. While the Judeo-Christian connection was well known, no one ever mentioned a Judeo-Christian-Islamic tradition. Why? If Muslims recognize and revere many of the major patriarchs and prophets of Judaism and Christianity (including Abraham, Moses, and Jesus) and God’s revealed books, the Torah and the Message (Gospels) of Jesus, why had I not been aware of these similarities after all my years of liberal arts and theological training?

Armstrong: Western feelings about Islam have certainly intensified since 9/11. But do you think that the Western perception of Islam has fundamentally changed? If so, how has it changed? If not, why not?

Esposito: There certainly has been more coverage of Islam and Muslims are more visible in the public square. However, during the past decade continued terrorist attacks, the sharp politicization among experts and political commentators, the influence of neocons and the hardline Christian Right have fed a significant increase in anti-Islam and anti-Muslim (Islamophobia) attitudes and policies. The Gallup World Poll and other major polls have demonstrated the impact on public opinion. When Americans were asked in 2007 what they admire about Islam, 57% (that figure dropped to 53% in 2009) said “nothing” or “I don’t know.” The critical missing link in our information and the key question in understanding Muslims ought to be “What do Muslims globally, the mainstream majority, really think?” To chart a new way forward, we in the West need to know not only what experts and pseudo-experts say about Muslim attitudes, beliefs, grievances, hopes, fears, and desires but also and most importantly what the often silenced Muslim majority have to say. I believe we’d discover many commonalities in their values, hopes and dreams.

At the same time, there has been an exponential growth in information and knowledge regarding Islam and Muslims, in books and media. It’s not clear that this has led to greater understanding. Toward that end I have seen an increase in inter-civilizational and inter-religious dialogue initiatives and media and popular culture projects that reach a broad audience, especially youth who are the future of Islam.

Armstrong: What are the particular challenges that Islam faces in the modern world?

Esposito: The first challenge is time. In contrast to Christian reforms that grew out of and were influenced primarily by conditions in the West over several centuries, Islam and Muslims have decades, not centuries, to make significant progress in a globalizing world characterized by Western political, military, and economic hegemony. Secondly, many Muslims today pursue reform not from a position of power and strength but from one of relative weakness, struggling for change in the face of authoritarianism and repression, limited freedom of speech and the press, and in some cases war and terror.

Armstrong: What do you find most hopeful in current Muslim thinking?

Esposito: Post 9/11, the call to reform Islam, to strengthen its relevance in a rapidly changing twenty-first-century world, has intensified. If some say that Islam is a perfect religion that doesn’t need to change or adapt, many others stress that Islam is inherently dynamic and that reinterpretation and reform are critical in the struggle to respond to the demands of our times, to marginalize extremists, and to promote gender equality, religious pluralism, and human rights. This debate has been intensified by a modern technology and mass communications and by the growth of religious extremism and terrorism in the name of Islam.

An influential group of vibrant Muslim intellectuals and religious leaders, from Africa to Asia, from Europe to America, have addressed the role of Islam in contemporary society: How do religion and Islamic law contribute to the modern nation-state? Where do Islamic values apply to key issues of today, like democracy, secularism, gender equality, human rights, free market economies, modern banking? What is the role of the clergy (ulama); are they the preeminent authoritative voices who speak for Islam?

Reformists are clergy, as well as intellectuals and activists; rulers and citizens, both traditionalist and modernist. They can be found at Islamic institutes and universities, at academic and religious conferences, and in parliamentary debates. Reformist ideas proliferate in hundreds of books and articles, audios, videos and DVDs, in newspaper editorials, in muftis’ fatwas, and on the Internet. As in the history of Christianity and the Reformation, change in Islam is not limited to debates in theology and law but also involves struggles in politics and society, and at times violence and terror.

Read Karen Armstrong’s foreword from The Future of Islam [PDF]

(Photo by J.D. Sloan)

From Publishers Weekly

A Georgetown University professor and well-known scholar of Islam, Esposito analyzes the current and future practice of Islam in this short but insightful volume. He surveys a number of topics, including identity issues for Muslims living in the West. Esposito highlights the world views of modern Muslim thinkers, such as Tariq Ramadan (Esposito modestly omits mention of his mentorship of some of these scholars). He tackles head-on the myth of Muslim tolerance of 9/11 by pointing to polls showing that the vast majority of Muslims disapproved of the attack and that 358 Muslim employees at the World Trade Center were among the dead. As a senior scientist for Gallup, Esposito has at his command the results of numerous polls of and about Muslims. In this book, he goes beyond the numbers to showcase what Muslims really stand for and want in today's world. Esposito's enthusiasm for his topic makes his book an easy and enlightening read. For instance, he jokes that his job is the easiest in the world as he has only been asked one question for more than 20 years (Is Islam a violent religion?). Independent scholar and bestselling author Karen Armstrong pens a solid foreword. (Feb.)
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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Oxford University Press; 1st edition (February 4, 2010)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 256 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0195165217
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0195165210
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.16 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 9.2 x 1 x 6.3 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 34 ratings

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John L. Esposito
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John L. Esposito is University Professor of Religion and International Affairs at Georgetown University and Founding Director of the Prince Alwaleed Bin-Talal Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding. He is the editor of The Oxford Encyclopedia of Modern Islam and The Oxford History of Islam, and author of Unholy War, What Everyone Needs to Know about Islam, and many other acclaimed works.

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
34 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on April 26, 2010
The Future of Islam taught me alot about Muslims in America and Europe and the challenges they face. The book provides easy to read background info on how Islam is used in politics and society as well as on the root causes of global terrorism around the world today.

Esposito portrays Islam's future in terms of a diverse mosaic of Muslim reformers whose ideas on womens' rights, human rights, democracy, war and peace are eye-opening! In the last chapter the author's insights on how to improve the future not only for the Muslim world but for us in the West as well were inspiring. The book is a great read for anyone who wants a global understanding of terrorism and real alternatives for peace. I've also enjoyed Esposito's Islam: the Straight Path and look forward to more in the future.
8 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2013
I bought this book for some research of a religion class I was taking in school. I learned much about the Muslim religion culture that I didn't understand. The media would have one believe all Muslims are terrorits when it's just not true. It's the handful of radicals that gives the entire population a bad name. Just like when we hear all Americans are infidels and we're hated so badly overseas, yet we keep sending them money to help. We're not the bad people either.
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2010
Content Summary: Esposito here reviews some of the radical elements in modern day Islam, from the ideology of Wahhabism in Saudi Arabia, to the "godfather" of radical Sunni Islam, Sayyid Qutb. He demonstrates, however, that theirs is not the only or primary voice of Muslims today. In global surveys (from "Who Speaks for Islam  Who Speaks For Islam?: What a Billion Muslims Really Think ) he illustrates that Muslims have condemned 9/11 and that many want the same democratic freedoms many North Americans also cherish. In fact there are quite a few "modernists", from Timothy Winter to Amina Wadud, who believe that Islam's interpretation is more open, tolerant, inclusive of all other religions, and open to democratic concepts.

Analytical Review: Much of what Esposito has written here also appears in earlier works, such as "Unholy War" 
Unholy War: Terror in the Name of Islam  and "Who Speaks for Islam?" Thus, parts of this book are not fresh and merely rehashing early works. That said, Esposito's section on Islamist reforms is very interesting, and Esposito makes some clear and definitive statements that only an inclusive, pluralist view of Islam will be able to reconcile itself to a more positive future with other religions. He does not pretend that problems do not exist, but fortunately does not confuse the problem elements and radical of Islam for the whole of the religion itself. The problem does not lie just with Muslims - but with any person (Christian, Muslim, Jew, Hindu or of any other ideology) who sees faith and belief as a zero-sum game, that some are right and others are damned. "The Future of Islam" is indeed open, and has a positive path before it, if Muslims and friends of Muslims everywhere are willing to take it.
5 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2013
I would have liked to see more discussion on the reformers as well as him acknowledging that some of the people he discussed flip flopped on issues such as violence/suicide bombing.
Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2015
This book written by one of the foremost scholars gives a deep and very interesting view on Islam. Dr.Esposito is both frank and understanding regarding this religion , its tenets, problems with modernism and the vast disparity in the thinking and practice of its followers. A great book for those who may really wish to take a serious unbiased look at Islam today and in the future.
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2020
Kindle edition for less weight in backpack.
Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2012
Esposito is bought and paid for by Prince al waleed bin-talal who donated $20 million to Esposito's cause.

Esposito founded the Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding at Georgetown University and is its current director. The center received a $20 million endowment from Saudi Arabian Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal "to advance education in the fields of Islamic civilization and Muslim-Christian understanding and strengthen its presence as a world leader in facilitating cross-cultural and inter-religious dialogue." [...]

This book is shameless propaganda. Far better you read Bernard Lewis and learn something.
5 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2016
Good up to date thorough reserch and insights.

Top reviews from other countries

FromEngland
3.0 out of 5 stars Asked the right questions, but fell short in the answers
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 1, 2017
A society needs peace and science to thrive. Without tolerance, there's no peace. Without science, there's no development. There'll be no peace until muslims have learnt to love their shi'i/sunni brothers and their jewish cousins and their christian neighbours... There'll be no scientific development if answers to all questions have to be sought from the Quran or equally ancient rituals and consensus. If a religion cannot bring peace or prosperity to its believers, it will decline.