Salafism is a theological movement whose radical wing is today affiliated with al-Qa ida and the Islamic State, but which draws on precedents stretching back to the medieval theology of Ibn Taymiyya. This innovative study focuses on the concept of theonomy in salafi thought: the tenet that rule by God's law is an essential component of faith, and the corresponding notion that other forms of rule based on human legislation are inherently polytheistic and thereby illegitimate. It is this tenet which furnishes radical militants with their principal casus belli against ruling regimes in the Muslim world. In this book, Daniel Lav details the intellectual grounding for modern salafi theonomy in Ibn Taymiyya's doctrine of tawhid and the writings of the early Wahhabi movement, in addition to the twentieth-century thought of Abu al-A la Mawdudi and Sayyid Qu b, while drawing on insights from comparative political theology to analyze this key school of thought.
Salafi Islam, whose radical wing is today affiliated with groups such as al-Qa ida and the Islamic State, has a long history, and is particularly indebted to Ibn Taymiyya's (d. 1328) doctrine of tawhid. This study examines key doctrines of radical salafi thought, considering both its premodern and modern intellectual history.
Recenzijos
'A gamechanger in the field of Salafi studies. Lav's book brings a new level of philological and conceptual sophistication to the analysis of Salafi political theology, revealing the deep underlying connections between the exclusivist monotheism of premodern Salafism and the theopolitical doctrines of modern Salafis, including the jihadis among them.' Cole Bunzel, Hoover Institution, Stanford University 'Daniel Lav's Salafi Political Theology is by far the most authoritative work on the important religious movement labelled Salafi and its roots in premodern Islamic theology and intellectual history. This book reveals the connections between towering figures such as Ibn Taymiyya, Wahhabi scholars and the moderns who claim to be their descendants. Lav expertly unfolds their arguments, and in so doing traces their conceptual genealogies, both real and invented. No existing work does this in terms of textual rigor and analytical sophistication. This will be a work of reference for decades to come.' Bernard Haykel, Princeton University
Daugiau informacijos
Offers a novel interpretation of radical salafism, considering both its premodern and modern precedents and influences.
Introduction;
1. Monolatry in Ibn Taymiyya's theological system;
2.
Monolatry in eighteenth-century revivalism;
3. Theonomy in premodern Salaf
jurisprudence;
4. Mawdd and Qub: the theonomic shift;
5. Salaf Jihd
theonomy.
Daniel Lav is a lecturer in the Department of Arabic Language and Literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research focuses on Islamic theology, with a particular emphasis on the salafi tradition of Sunni Islam. Salafi Political Theology continues the exploration of Salaf intellectual history begun in his previous book, Radical Islam and the Revival of Medieval Theology (Cambridge, 2012).