ABSTRACT

The Iranian Revolution has catalysed the preconceptions holding sway in the Western World about the character of Islam and its politics, based as they are on a mixture of imagined cultural superiority and a latent fear of a resurgence similar to the Arab conquests of the seventh and eighth centuries of the long Ottoman domination of Eastern Europe.

This book constitutes a counterweight to such monolithic perceptions of Islam. It surveys the nature of opinion and of government in the larger Muslim regions of the world, and the position of Muslims in states where they are not the dominant population. Each contributor expresses his own assessment of the regional data, and the editor’s concluding chapter draws together the threads of a work which will form an important contribution to international understanding and a first breach in the ‘Green Curtain’ dividing East and West.

First published in 1981.

part 1|46 pages

The Arab Heartland

chapter 2|20 pages

Saudi Arabia

chapter 3|23 pages

Egypt, Syria and Iraq

part 2|22 pages

The Arab Periphery

chapter 4|20 pages

North Africa

part 3|86 pages

Non-Arab West Asia

chapter 5|10 pages

Turkey

chapter 6|28 pages

Iran

chapter 7|19 pages

Afghanistan

chapter 8|22 pages

Pakistan

part 4|45 pages

Southeast Asia

chapter 9|25 pages

Malaysia

chapter 10|18 pages

Indonesia

part 5|82 pages

The Minorities

chapter 11|22 pages

The Philippines

chapter 12|23 pages

Thailand*

chapter 13|15 pages

The Soviet Union