EDITORIAL

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AbdulHamid A. AbuSulayman

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Abstract

The present issue of the American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences
represents a ground-breaking effort of sorts in that it is the first to be
organized around a single theme. Thus, all papers presented here revolve
around the issue of modernity and the response of Muslims to its challenges.
Although this clearly is not a novel subject for the pages of the
joumal, this thematic issue brings to its readership a number of informed
perspectives that contribute significantly to a deeper understanding of the
phenomenon as it relates to the contempomy Islamic experience.
In “The Dance of the Pen, the Play of the Sign: A Study in the Relationship
between Modernity, Immanence, and Deconstruction,” Abdel
Wabab Elmessiri delves into the Western philosophical tdition and its
discourse regarding modernity, recalling some of his earlier contributions
in the pages of this joumal. Elmessiri takes a hard look at the underlying
assumptions of modernity, including its view of humanity, and explains
how the nature-matter paradigm has insinuated itself as the underlying
paradigm of Western modernity. Of particular interest to readers will be
his exploration of the idea of comprehensive secularism as opposed to
partial secularism and his study of the metaphysics of immanence.
The second study, M. Mumtaz Ali’s “The Concept of Modernization:
An Analysis of Contempomy Islamic Thought,” may be viewed
as an attempt to construct a working definition of Islamic modernization
through a critical analysis of the Western concept’s epistemological
foundations. The author discusses the responses of such contemporary
thinkers as Iqbal, Qutb, Mawdudi, al-Faruqi, al-Attas, al-‘Alwani, and
AbuSulayman on the subject of modernization and concludes by suggesting
a four-phase project for the modernization of Islamic thought.
While the next contribution to the joumal‘s theme takes the Indian
subcontinent as its venue, its discussion of modernization, like the work
of the poet Iqbal himself, is directed towad the entire ummah. Through
Athar Farqui‘s translation, readers of English may now have a look at the
work of Justice Javaid Iqbal. In his “Modern Indian Muslims and Iqbal,”
Iqbal’s son, who is a scholar in his own right, analyzes the substance and
significance of his father‘s thought as expressed in the controversial
Madras lectures and The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam ...

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