Gülen: The Ambiguous Politics of Market Islam in Turkey and the World

Voorkant
NYU Press, 12 aug 2013 - 304 pagina's

The "Hizmet" ("Service")
Movement of Fethullah Gülen is Turkey’s most influential Islamic identity
community. Widely praised throughout the early 2000s as a mild and moderate
variation on Islamic political identity, the Gülen Movement has long been a
topic of both adulation and conspiracy in Turkey. In Gülen, Joshua D. Hendrick suggests that the Gülen Movement should
be given credit for playing a significant role in Turkey's rise to global
prominence.


Hendrick draws on 14 months of ethnographic fieldwork
in Turkey and the U.S. for his study. He argues that the movement’s growth and
impact both inside and outside Turkey position both its leader and its
followers as indicative of a "post political" turn in twenty-first
century Islamic political identity in general, and as illustrative of Turkey’s
political, economic, and cultural transformation in particular.

 

Inhoudsopgave

The Worlds Most Influential Public Intellectual
1
1 Approaching Muslim Politics in Turkey
11
2 The Political Economy of Muslim Politics in Turkey
35
3 An Ambiguous Leader
56
4 Community
89
5 Education
123
6 Değirmenin suyu nereden geliyor? Where does the water for the mill come from?
144
7 Manufacturing Consent
174
8 Strategic Ambiguity and Its Discontents ie the Gülen Movement in the United States
206
The Marketization of Muslim Politics in Turkey
233
Notes
243
Bibliography
257
Index
271
About the Author
276
Copyright

Overige edities - Alles bekijken

Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen

Over de auteur (2013)

Joshua D. Hendrick is Assistant Professor of Sociology and Global Studies at Loyola University Maryland in Baltimore. He received his PhD and MA degrees in sociology from the University of California, Santa Cruz and his MA degree in cultural anthropology from Northern Arizona University.

Bibliografische gegevens