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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Sadia AbbasPublisher: Fordham University Press Imprint: Fordham University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.511kg ISBN: 9780823257850ISBN 10: 0823257851 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 26 May 2014 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThis is the first book to deal with the interlinked phenomena of Islamic radicalism and Islamophobia by exiting the apologetic discourse to which left-liberal critique has largely been reduced. Re-deploying the Eurocentric terms that inform so much scholarship on the issue, Abbas shows how her own allies on the left have ended up focussing on a severely 'Protestant' kind of Islam, in contrast to which she excavates a 'Baroque' auto-critique as part of a Muslim 'Counter-Reformation.' -Faisal Devji, St. Anthony's College, Oxford University Sadia Abbas has produced a watershed study that promises to be a landmark in the critical analysis of the nexes between empire, Islam, gender and culture. This book provides a roadmap for a new generation of scholarship that matches the spirit and urgencies of the time. -Paul Amar, University of California, Santa Barbara Once in a while, a book comes along with the force of a gale and shakes the carefully laid foundations of an academic field or discourse. This is such a book. A compelling and erudite tour-de-force that relentlessly examines the historical amnesias and political erasures at the center of contemporary popular culture and critical theory constructions of the Muslim subject, At Freedom's Limit powerfully reminds us that radical critique is rooted in complex histories of identity and struggle, both local and global. Incisive, passionate and peppered with scintillating humor, Abbas's book will surely change the face of postcolonial studies. -Samah Selim, Rutgers University Sadia Abbas is a virtuosa of cultural and literary criticism. She has a remarkable ability to expose essentialist and exclusivist prejudices that hide in discourses repudiating the essentialism and exclusivism of others. Uncompromising in the vindication of all the oppressed, including the victims of victims, this book sharpens both our critical faculty and our sense of justice. -Gilbert Achcar, Professor at the School of Orie This is the first book to deal with the interlinked phenomena of Islamic radicalism and Islamophobia by exiting the apologetic discourse to which left-liberal critique has largely been reduced. Re-deploying the Eurocentric terms that inform so much scholarship on the issue, Abbas shows how her own allies on the left have ended up focussing on a severely 'Protestant' kind of Islam, in contrast to which she excavates a 'Baroque' auto-critique as part of a Muslim 'Counter-Reformation.' GCoFaisal Devji, St. Anthony's College, Oxford University This is the first book to deal with the interlinked phenomena of Islamic radicalism and Islamophobia by exiting the apologetic discourse to which left-liberal critique has largely been reduced. Re-deploying the Eurocentric terms that inform so much scholarship on the issue, Abbas shows how her own allies on the left have ended up focussing on a severely 'Protestant' kind of Islam, in contrast to which she excavates a 'Baroque' auto-critique as part of a Muslim 'Counter-Reformation.' -Faisal Devji, St. Anthony's College, Oxford University Sadia Abbas has produced a watershed study that promises to be a landmark in the critical analysis of the nexes between empire, Islam, gender and culture. This book provides a roadmap for a new generation of scholarship that matches the spirit and urgencies of the time. -Paul Amar, University of California, Santa Barbara Once in a while, a book comes along with the force of a gale and shakes the carefully laid foundations of an academic field or discourse. This is such a book. A compelling and erudite tour-de-force that relentlessly examines the historical amnesias and political erasures at the center of contemporary popular culture and critical theory constructions of the Muslim subject, At Freedom's Limit powerfully reminds us that radical critique is rooted in complex histories of identity and struggle, both local and global. Incisive, passionate and peppered with scintillating humor, Abbas's book will surely change the face of postcolonial studies. -Samah Selim, Rutgers University Sadia Abbas is a virtuosa of cultural and literary criticism. She has a remarkable ability to expose essentialist and exclusivist prejudices that hide in discourses repudiating the essentialism and exclusivism of others. Uncompromising in the vindication of all the oppressed, including the victims of victims, this book sharpens both our critical faculty and our sense of justice. -Gilbert Achcar, Professor at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London This is a thoughtful and provocative book which illuminates some of the central questions of our times . It is a book to be carefully read as with an astute intelligence it challenges many conventional ideas about what might constitute freedom . -Anthony Bogues, Brown University What possibilities exist in and as a function of the new Islam that Sadia Abbas boldly, rigorously announces and describes? What new understandings of freedom emerge from the delineation and disruption of political theology's limits that she accomplishes? In vivid analyses of the new global iconographies through which the varieties of Muslim experience would be represented and regulated, Abbas offers a poetics supple enough to attend to the painful complexities of the postcolonial condition and subtle enough to discern, in those complexities, what remains of anticolonial aspiration. At Freedom's Limit is unique, powerful and necessary. --Frederick C. Moten, Duke University Author InformationSadia Abbas is Assistant Professor of English at Rutgers University, Newark. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |