Islamism in Central Asia
PhDr. Vera Exnerova, PhD.
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This course aims to:
- provide introduction to the thought and practice of major radical Islamic actors in
Central Asia (through exploring their leaflets, sermons, journals, excerpts from audiocassettes, etc. and examples of their political practice);
- provide comparison with the goals and practice of their predecessors and overview of existing counter-responses (on the side of the governments, religious authorities, other
Islamic groups);
- provide students with overview of the scholarly literature on Islamism Central Asia, and of main trends in exploring the phenomenon of political and radical Islam in general, with the aim to allow students to develop skills to critically assess information and to interpret Islamism in the 21st century.
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Students are expected to attend lectures, read the assigned material, and participate in discussions. A maximum 15 points could be obtained for quality attendance.
Every student is required to deliver one presentation on a chosen topic during the course.
Presentations should be based on one´s own research and be analytical rather than descriptive, demonstrating student´s critical approach towards the sources. For the presentation a maximum 30 points could be obtained.
The final written exam will be based on lectures, class discussions, presentations, and readings. A maximum of 55 points could be obtained for the exam.
Quality attendance (15%), presentation (30%), final test (55%)
Evaluation: at least 60% Grade 3 at least 75% Grade 2 at least 90% Grade 1
Students can miss one week maximum, in exceptional cases students must excuse their absence with me in advance. I reserve the right to hold pop quizzes if it appears students are not keeping up with the reading. Should they be necessary, these quizzes will be included in the participation portion of the overall grade.
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Week 1 - Introduction
- Introduction of the course framework, background, expectations and requirements
Week 2 - Islam and State in Central Asian History
- Babajanov, B.: "Islam in Uzbekistan: From the Struggle for "Religious Purity" to
Political Activism." In: Rumer, B. (ed.): Central Asia. A Gathering Storm? New York:
Sharpe, 2002, s. 299-330.
- Adeeb Khalid, Islam after Communism. Religion and Politics in Central Asia.
University of California Press (2014), chapter 1-2
- Recommended reading: B. F. Manz, Central Asian Uprising in the Nineteenth
Century: Ferghana under the Russians, Russian Review, No. 3, 1987, pp. 267-281
(available in JSTOR)
Week 3 - Fundamentalists, Basmachis and Jadids in Soviet Central Asia
- Alisherbek Muminov, Fundamentalist Challenges To Local Islamic Traditions in
Soviet and Post-Soviet Central Asia
- Adeeb Khalid, Islam after Communism. Religion and Politics in Central Asia.
University of California Press (2014), chapter 3.
- Recommended reading: Kirill Nourzhanov, "Bandits, warlords, national heroes: interpretations of the Basmachi movement in Tajikistan," Central Asian Survey 34/2, 2015, pp. 177-189
Week 4 - The Movement of Mujaddidiya in the Ferghana Valley
- Bakhtiyar Babajanov, "The Economic and Religious History of a Kolkhoz Village:
Khojawot from Soviet Modernisation to the Aftermath of the Islamic Revival." In
Stéphane A. Dudoignon and Christian Noack, eds., Allah´s Kolkhozes. Migration, De-
Stalinisation, Privatisation and the New Muslim Congregations in the Soviet Realm
(1950s-2000s), Berlin: Klaus Schwarz Verlag, 2014: 202-264.
- Allen J. Frank, Jahangir Mamatov, "Part I. Lectures of Islamic Reformers
(Mujadiddiya)", Uzbek Islamic Debates. Texts, Translations, and Commentary.
Dunwoody Press 2006
- Recommended reading - Martha B. Olcott "Roots of Radical Islam", Carnegie Papers 77/2007, pp. 10-27
Week 5 - Islamic Renaissance Party in Tajikistan
- Stéphane A. Dudoignon, Sayyid Ahmad Qalandar; "´They Were All from the
Country.´ The Revival and Politicisation of Islam in the Lower Wakhsh River Valley of the Tajik SSR (1947-1997), In Stéphane A. Dudoignon and Christian Noack, eds.,
Allah´s Kolkhozes. Migration, De-Stalinisation, Privatisation and the New Muslim
Congregations in the Soviet Realm (1950s-2000s), Berlin: Klaus Schwarz Verlag, 2014: 47-122
- Shahram Akbarzadeh, "Why did nationalism fail in Tajikistan?", Europe-Asia Studies
Vol. 48/7, 2006, pp. 1105-1129 (available in JSTOR)
- Recommend reading - M. Kabiri, "Tajikistan´s Islamic Renaissance Party Rebrands,
Using Social Projects to Reach Voters"; Saodat Olimova, "Political Islam and Conflict in Tajikistan", Central Asia and the Caucasus Online
Week 6 - Hizb ut-Tahrir al-Islami in Central Asia
- ICG, "Radical Islam in Central Asia: Responding to Hizb-ut-Tahrir", Report 2003
- Allen J. Frank, Jahangir Mamatov "Part III. Hizb-ut-Tahrir: Political Polemics", in
Uzbek Islamic Debates. Texts, Translations, and Commentary. Dunwoody Press 2006
- Recommended reading - Emmanuel Karagiannis, "Political Islam in Uzbekistan: Hizb ut-Tahrir al-Islami, Europe-Asia Studies 58/2, 2006, pp. 261-280.
Week 7 - Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan in Exile
- Martha B. Olcott and Bakhtiyar Babajanov "The Terrorist Notebooks", Foreign Policy 135/2003, pp. 30-40 (available in JSTOR or at "The Terrorist Notebooks")
- Allen J. Frank, Jahangir Mamatov "Part V. The Rhetoric of exile and Insurgency", in
Uzbek Islamic Debates. Texts, Translations, and Commentary. Dunwoody Press 2006
- Recommended reading - Martha B. Olcott "Roots of Radical Islam", Carnegie Papers 77/2007, pp. 28-35
Week 8 - Akromiyah in Ferghana Valley
- ICG, "Uzbekistan: The Andijon Uprising", Report 2005
- Allen J. Frank, Jahangir Mamatov "Part IV: Islamic Philosophical Thought and the
Akromiya Controversy", Uzbek Islamic Debates. Texts, Translations, and
Commentary. Dunwoody Press 2006
- Additional reading - Sarah Kendzior "Inventing Akromiya: The Role of Uzbek
Propagandists in the Andijon Massacre", 2006
Week 9 - Counter-responses in Central Asia
- Baktiyar Babajanov, A.K. von Kügelgen, Alisherbek Muminov (2007), Disputes on
Muslim Authority in Central Asia in 20th Century. Almaty, Kaz: Daik Press, part on
Hindustani, Mohammad Sodiq (available with lecturer)
- Allen J. Frank, Jahangir Mamatov "Official Rebuttal", Uzbek Islamic Debates. Texts,
Translations, and Commentary. Dunwoody Press 2006, pp. 279-318
- Recommended reading - Central Asia: Islam and the State, ICG Report 59, 2003
Week 10 - How Islamism in Central Asia is studied in contemporary scholarly literature
- Kathleen Collins, "Ideas, Networks, and Islamist Movements: Evidence from Central
Asia and the Caucasus." World Politics 60/1, 2007, pp. 64-96.
- Eric McGlinchey, "Islamic Revivalism and State Failure in Kyrgyzstan." Problems of
Post-Communism 56, no. 3 (May/June 2009), pp. 16-28
- Additional reading - John Heathershaw, Sophie Roche, "Islam and Political Violence in Tajikistan. An Ethnographic Perspective on the Causes and Consequences of the 2010 Armed Conflict in the Kamarob Gorge", Ethnopolitics Papers, No. 8, 2011
Week 11 - Main trends in study of political Islam in general
- Quintan Wiktorowicz (ed.), "Introduction", in Islamic Activism and Social Movement
Theory, Indiana University Press 2003
- Asef Bayat (ed.) "Chapter 1. Post-Islamism at large", in Post-Islamism. The Changing
Faces of Political Islam. Oxford University Press 2013
Week 12 - Contextualizing Islamism - a threat, state failure, or beyond?
- Yahya Sadowski, "Political Islam: Asking Wrong Questions?", Annual Review of
Political Science Vol. 9, 2006, pp. 215-240
- Khaled Hroub (ed.), "Introduction" in Political Islam. Context versus Ideology.
London Middle East Institute at SOAS 2010, pp. 9-19.
Required Readings:
Allen J. Frank, Jahangir Mamatov. Uzbek Islamic Debates. Texts, Translations, and
Commentary. Dunwoody Press 2006 (available with lecturer)
+ all other texts mentioned in the Course Outline
This syllabus is a general plan for the course; changes announced to the class by the lecturer may be necessary and may occur with reasonable advance notice.
The aim of the course is to give the students insight into argumentation and practice of Islamist groups in Central
Asia. Students will study and discuss primary sources produced by Islamist actors across the diverse historical contexts. The outcome of the course will be to understand both the diversity of Islamism(s) and the existing conceptual and theoretical categories used to analyze it.
Pro tento dotaz bohužel nemáme k dispozici žádné další výsledky.