=LDR 00000nam 2200000 4500 =001 INLIS000000000004778 =005 20200508202857 =008 200508||||||||| | ||| |||| ||eng|| =020 $$a 0691120536 =035 $0010-0520004778 =041 $$a eng =082 $$a 322.1 =084 $$a 322.1/PIS/M =100 $$a Dale F. Eickelman =700 $$a and James Piscatori =245 $$a Muslim Politics =260 $$a New York $b Thomson $c 1996 =300 $$a xix, 235p.$b : illus,;$c 23cm. =500 $$a Indeks : p.219 - 235 =520 $$a This book is about how to think about "Muslim politics". A vast amount of literature exists on Islam and politics, and from different perspective we ourselves have contributed to it. Drawing on that literature, we seek to clarify the meanings of such concepts as tradition, authority, ethnicity, protest, and symbolic space that are inescapably part of theprofessional inheritance of our disciplines anthropology and political science but which often recede into the background of ethnographic or political case studies. It is not a book about the Islamic revival, nor is it a handbook to the politics of individual Muslim societies, much less to the politics of the Middle East. This book is intended to pose questions about the nature of one kind of politics similar to but not synonymous with what Michael Mann (1986) calls "ideological politics" in a variety of regional settings. =650 $$a Islamic politics =650 $$a Muslim-Political Activity =650 $$a Religion and Politics