Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
10. THE LOGIC OF THE CONQUEST SOCIETY: ISIS, APOCALYPTIC VIOLENCE AND THE ‘REINSTATEMENT’ OF SLAVE CONCUBINAGE
-
Omar Anchassi
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Dates, Abbreviations and Online References viii
- List of Illustrations ix
- Acknowledgements x
- 1. VIOLENCE IN ISLAMIC THOUGHT: METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES AND PROBLEMATIC CATEGORIES 1
-
Part I. Violence and Islam: Methodological Concerns
- 2. IL/LEGITIMATE VIOLENCE IN MODERN ISLAMIC THOUGHT: A MINORITY REPORT ON MUSLIM VIOLENCE 17
- 3. THE LURE OF JIHĀD: POST-TRADITIONAL HISTORIES OF VIOLENCE IN THE ISLAMIC WORLD 39
-
Part II. Resistance and Colonialism: South Asian Contexts
- 4. FROM CLIENT TO REBEL? THE PHILOSOPHER FAŻL-I ḤAQQ KHAYRĀBĀDĪ, HIS RISĀLA GHADARĪYA AND THE EVENTS OF 1857 75
- 5. ALTERNATIVE RESISTANCE TO THE BRITISH RAJ: AḤMAD RIḌĀ KHĀN’S LEGAL AND SOCIOPOLITICAL FATWAS 99
- 6. A ṬĀLIBĀN LEGAL DISCOURSE ON VIOLENCE 123
-
Part III. Justifying Violence
- 7. BUʿITHTU BIʾL-SAYF: JIHĀD, MONOLATRY AND THEONOMY IN MODERN SALAFISM 163
- 8. AL-QĀ ʿIDA’S POST-ARAB SPRING JIHAD: CONFIRMATION OR RE-EVALUATION? 186
- 9. THE ARAB REVOLUTIONS AND JIHADISM 210
- 10. THE LOGIC OF THE CONQUEST SOCIETY: ISIS, APOCALYPTIC VIOLENCE AND THE ‘REINSTATEMENT’ OF SLAVE CONCUBINAGE 225
- 11. ‘NAY, WE OBEYED GOD WHEN WE BURNED HIM’: DEBATING IMMOLATION (TAḤRĪQ) BETWEEN THE ISLAMIC STATE AND AL-QĀ ʿIDA 249
-
Part IV. Communicating Violence
- 12. VIOLENCE AND POLITICAL MOBILISATION IN THE DISCOURSE OF MUQTADĀ AL-ṢADR 291
- 13. MANAGING VIOLENT CONFLICT: HUDNA AND TAHDIʾA, BEYOND A STRATEGIC PAUSE 315
- 14. NOTES ON SOME JIHADIST POEMS 334
- 15. THE ‘OTHER’ IN THE DISCOURSE OF HAMAS AND HIZBULLAH 347
- 16. CONCLUDING REMARKS: VIOLENCE IN ISLAMIC THOUGHT 362
- Bibliography 366
- Index 408
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Dates, Abbreviations and Online References viii
- List of Illustrations ix
- Acknowledgements x
- 1. VIOLENCE IN ISLAMIC THOUGHT: METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES AND PROBLEMATIC CATEGORIES 1
-
Part I. Violence and Islam: Methodological Concerns
- 2. IL/LEGITIMATE VIOLENCE IN MODERN ISLAMIC THOUGHT: A MINORITY REPORT ON MUSLIM VIOLENCE 17
- 3. THE LURE OF JIHĀD: POST-TRADITIONAL HISTORIES OF VIOLENCE IN THE ISLAMIC WORLD 39
-
Part II. Resistance and Colonialism: South Asian Contexts
- 4. FROM CLIENT TO REBEL? THE PHILOSOPHER FAŻL-I ḤAQQ KHAYRĀBĀDĪ, HIS RISĀLA GHADARĪYA AND THE EVENTS OF 1857 75
- 5. ALTERNATIVE RESISTANCE TO THE BRITISH RAJ: AḤMAD RIḌĀ KHĀN’S LEGAL AND SOCIOPOLITICAL FATWAS 99
- 6. A ṬĀLIBĀN LEGAL DISCOURSE ON VIOLENCE 123
-
Part III. Justifying Violence
- 7. BUʿITHTU BIʾL-SAYF: JIHĀD, MONOLATRY AND THEONOMY IN MODERN SALAFISM 163
- 8. AL-QĀ ʿIDA’S POST-ARAB SPRING JIHAD: CONFIRMATION OR RE-EVALUATION? 186
- 9. THE ARAB REVOLUTIONS AND JIHADISM 210
- 10. THE LOGIC OF THE CONQUEST SOCIETY: ISIS, APOCALYPTIC VIOLENCE AND THE ‘REINSTATEMENT’ OF SLAVE CONCUBINAGE 225
- 11. ‘NAY, WE OBEYED GOD WHEN WE BURNED HIM’: DEBATING IMMOLATION (TAḤRĪQ) BETWEEN THE ISLAMIC STATE AND AL-QĀ ʿIDA 249
-
Part IV. Communicating Violence
- 12. VIOLENCE AND POLITICAL MOBILISATION IN THE DISCOURSE OF MUQTADĀ AL-ṢADR 291
- 13. MANAGING VIOLENT CONFLICT: HUDNA AND TAHDIʾA, BEYOND A STRATEGIC PAUSE 315
- 14. NOTES ON SOME JIHADIST POEMS 334
- 15. THE ‘OTHER’ IN THE DISCOURSE OF HAMAS AND HIZBULLAH 347
- 16. CONCLUDING REMARKS: VIOLENCE IN ISLAMIC THOUGHT 362
- Bibliography 366
- Index 408