ABSTRACT

This book offers comparative ontologies of both Islam and liberalism as discourses more broadly construed.

The author argues that, despite recent efforts to speak of overlapping consensuses and discursive congruence, the fundamental categories that constitute "Islam" and "Liberalism" remain very different, and that these differences should be taken seriously. Thus far, no recent scholarly works have explicitly or meticulously broken down where these differences lie. The author rigorously explores questions related to rights, moral epistemologies, the role of religion in the public sphere, and more general approaches to legal discourse, via primary and canonical sources constitutive of both Islam and liberalism. He then goes on to articulate why communitarian modes of thought are better suited for engaging with Islam and contemporary socio-political modes of organization than liberalism is.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of politics and international relations, Islam, liberalism, and communitarianism.

chapter 1|24 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|26 pages

Setting the table

Liberalism and its enlightenment origins

chapter 3|24 pages

“Liberalisms”

Exploring the deep familial relationship between comprehensive liberalism and political liberalism

chapter 4|16 pages

“Islams”

Rethinking the question “what is Islam?” and rearticulating it as a coherent discursive tradition despite the multiplicity of local traditions

chapter 9|16 pages

Conclusion