The Islamic Studies Network

The Department of Arabic and Middle Eastern Studies,
School of Modern Languages and Cultures
University of Leeds
28 January 2012

Teaching Islamic Studies:

Methodological Concerns, Practical Solutions

09.00-9.30 am: Arrival and Registration

9.30-10.00 am: Welcome and Opening of Symposium

Dr Zahia Smail Salhi & Dr Mustapha Sheikh

10.00- 11.00am: Key note Address, Dr Jon Hoover, University of Nottingham

A Vision for Teaching Islamic Studies in the University

11.00- 11.30: Coffee break and networking opportunity

11.30- 11.50: Dr Alison Scott-Baumann, University of Gloucester,

Faith, Culture and the Secular Mind: How Do We Engage All Three?

11.50- 12.10: Dr Mehmet Asutay, University of Durham,

Between Neo-classical Methodology and Fiqh: The Methodological (Mis)Construction of Islamic Economics and Finance

12.10- 12.30: Discussion

12.30- 14.00: Lunch break

14.00- 14.20: Dr Sean McLaughlin, University of Leeds,

25 Years of Learning and Teaching about Islam and Muslim Societies in the UK: multi-disciplinary locations, changing contexts and new objects/relations of study.

14.20-14.40: Dr Masoumeh Velayati, Al-Maktoum Institute

Teaching Women in Islam

14.40- 15.00: Discussion

15.00-15.30: Coffee break

15.30-15.50: Dr Shuruq Naguib, University of Lancaster

Teaching Islam beyond Orientalism: The double gaze of the Cross-cultural

15.50-16.10: Dr Saeko Yazaki, University of Cambridge

Teaching and Studying Islam: Consciousness and Engagement.

16.10-17.00: Discussion and Closing Remarks

ABSTRACTS

A Vision for Teaching Islamic Studies in the University

Dr Jon Hoover, University of Nottingham

My address will commend 'critical humanism' as an ethical foundation for teaching Islamic Studies in the university. Criticalhumanism seeksknowledge for the sake of makingspace in the heart for others and participating in wider experiences of human community rather than for domination and control. Thishumanism will be elaborated indialoguewithEdward Said'scritique of Orientalism, Said'ssecular humanism and call for a return to philology, andmy own Christian humanism. I will also provide a defense ofobjectivity understood not as neutrality butas fairness and intellectualrigorin advocating one's own views and representing the views of others.

Faith, Culture and the Secular Mind: How Do We Engage All Three?

Dr Alison Scott-Baumann, University of Gloucester,

Within Britain there are demands for better, more inclusive understanding of Islam and the West. Internationally there are major changes afoot in the Arab world and it is likely that these changes will have a significant impact on British Muslims: there is already considerable debate about secularism and Islam within pluralist societies like Britain, and such debate often polarises the secular and the Islamic as mutually exclusive and antithetical to each other as in Huntingdon’s theory of the clash of civilisations. Aggression towards Islam is encouraged from within the establishment, and increases the need for clarity and exposure within the university sector. I believe that UK universities and Muslim institutions can benefit from collaborative work and linkages which can potentially lead to cross-fertilisations of pedagogy and intellectual context. Gender equality is also an issue that can be addressed through development of new pedagogies. Such progress is attainable, yet requires that the artificial polarization of Islam and the West is addressed directly and openly by all parties. This requires a brutally honest analysis of capitalisms, secularisms and the supposed ‘Other’. In my judgement as a philosopher this requires a new political will and a new pedagogy, and I will propose a way forward with the use of several indicative case studies from collaborative partnership work and gender studies. These are flawed yet perhaps more feasible than a new political will.

Between Neo-classical Methodology and Fiqh: The Methodological (Mis)Construction of Islamic Economics and Finance

Dr Mehmet Asutay, University of Durham,

Islamic moral economy (IME) emerged in the post-colonial period as a response to the underdevelopment of Muslim societies with the objective of constructing an authentic development strategy through essentialising the ontological and epistemological sources of Islam. While identity politics shaped the initial debate and conceptualisation of IME, since 1990s Islamic finance (IF) diverged from the aspirational and moral economy worldview of Islam by articulating itself within the methodology of neo-classical economics and ‘declaring’ its tacit ‘independence’.

This paper aims to explore the observed dichotomous methodological development of IME and IF, as two different methodological paths. In doing so, it aims to draw attention to the importance of teaching these subjects through their peculiar methodological frameworks rather than a pragmatist approach in mixing and matching resulting in ‘no methodological’ approach base, which is the prevailing case in the teaching of these subjects in the academia and beyond. Therefore, this paper suggests that in aiming to overcome taqlid (mimicking) and contributing to knowledge through tahqiq (essentialisation of peculiar Islamic knowledge), an essential methodological approach must be developed, so that new IF products can be engineered within the IME framework rather than ‘Islamising’ whatever the conventional finance offers.

The methodological incontinency of rational-legalistic position of ‘fiqhi’ process within the ‘Islamising’ process is also examined in this paper; as usul al-fiqh has developed within the particular axiomatic and foundational base of a particular madhab. However, the fiqh process in IF in engineering conventional products into Islamic domain use different madhab positions in halallising the various stages of a particular product. Thus, an IF product is not produced within the framework of one madhab as usul al-fiqh suggests but a number of madhab injunctions is utilised to make a product Shari’ah compliant. This suggests a mix-and-match approach rather than an internally consistent and externally coherent approach in developing knowledge, which suggests the pragmatism of IF and the fiqhi process.

This paper, as a consequence, locates the current methodological failures of IF in the ‘Islamisation of knowledge movement’ attempted since 1970s. New methodological developments, however, have to go beyond such a complacent and defeatist attitude towards knowledge by adapting an ‘authenticating’ approach aimed at by IME beyond endogenising ‘modernity’ and ‘multiple modernities’.

25 Years of Learning and Teaching about Islam and Muslim Societies in the UK: multi-disciplinary locations, changing contexts and new objects/relations of study.

Dr Sean McLaughlin, University of Leeds,

In the last 25 years, a changing social contexts and intellectual frames have gradually challenged and transformed the location of the study of Islam and Muslims in British universities, both in terms of a classroom and staff that is more religiously and ethnically diverse but also theories of knowledge, objectivity and authority that are shaped by postcolonial and postmodern thinking. In this presentation I provide some brief reflexive snapshots of my experience as a non-Muslim, white but non-English, male, student and teacher of Islam and Muslim societies in UK higher education since the late 1980s. However, while personal identity has often positioned me in teaching as in research, a location towards the periphery of ‘Islamic Studies’ in terms of Religious Studies, South Asian Studies has been at least as important.

Reflecting on how all these issues have played out practically in the content and approach of my teaching on Islam, contemporary Muslim societies and the UK diaspora, as well as in relation to different constituencies of students – secular, Christian and Muslim- I will sketch some contrasting examples of how issues of ‘objectivity’ and ‘authority’ have been confronted and negotiated more or less successfully in interactions with undergraduate and postgraduate students.

Teaching Women in Islam

Dr Masoumeh Velayati, Al-Maktoum Institute

The teaching of Islamic Studies in British Universities has a long history of over one hundred years. However, Muslim women have received little attention in academic courses and hardly any specific course has been allocated to their issues. This is despite the fact there is a large body of literature from both secular and Islamic perspectives about Muslim women and their issues mostly within Muslim countries and to some extent in the West. Moreover, Muslim women as a group, face many negative stereotypes which need to be challenged in a more constructive manner.

Therefore, this course is important as it gives a fair amount of attention to Muslim women and their issues. The course examines the debate on women in Islam within a feminist framework to discuss gender relations and dynamics in Muslim societies and highlight the historical aspect of these dynamics and the contemporary challenges facing Muslim women both in Muslim countries and the West. It evaluates the relationship between Islamic feminism and secular feminism. It examines and analyses historical roots and development of Islamic discourses on woman and gender. It also covers some legal and political issues with regard to women’s rights such as marriage, divorce, dress code, and political participation in different national contexts.

Teaching Islam beyond Orientalism: The double gaze of the Cross-cultural

Dr Shuruq Naguib, University of Lancaster

The compelling argument of Said (1978) in Orientalism transformed our view of Islamic studies and its history by deconstructing the embeddness of knowledge produced on the ‘orient’ in colonial relations of power. This has had a significant impact on the study of Islam and on the interrogation of the various categories through which an academic discourse on Islam has essentialised it as the ‘other’. In the Islamic studies classroom, however, the intellectual and ideological problematics of Orientalism are very often eschewed, or briefly introduced as an instance of theoretical reflection at a later stage of a study programme. In this paper, I suggest that, for a critical pedagogy, the study of Islam should be situated within a framework of a double critique, one that interrogates constructions of both the ‘orient’ and ‘occident’ , not only to go beyond the limitations of Said’s one-sided analysis but also to resist the resilient epistemological subjection of ‘Islam’ as an object of western fascination. I propose that a cross-cultural framework, that is conscious of the double and reciprocal gaze it invites, is a powerful way of achieving a double critique that allows those teaching and studying Islam to also reflect upon the epistemological agency within Islamic discourses in constructing the ‘occident’. This, on the basis of my teaching experience, has been a powerful way to unsettle patterns of reproducing critical or apologetic discourses which objectify and essentialise Islam and to bring the students of Islam to recognise and consciously question their own positionality and their agency in knowledge production.

Teaching and Studying Islam: Consciousness and Engagement.

Dr Saeko Yazaki, University of Cambridge

How do we teach Islam, and monotheistic faiths in general? If religious truth is provided through revelation, how can we discuss it logically when faith makes sense only to its believers? Modern western academia is in general expected to demonstrate intellectuality, rather than divine truth, using impartial scholarly accounts and conceptual tools. Towards religion and ideology, secular universities are dominated by a neutralist and rationalist atmosphere. The aim of Islamic studies, therefore, does not concern the authenticity or falsity of the belief and practice of Muslims.

Nevertheless, the issue of authority and credentials often creeps into class, because of the very presence of a teacher and the dialogical nature of classroom education. Some believers may feel that their religion can be understood, and by extension taught, only by its followers. Non-Muslim students may suspect that Muslim teachers are trying to promote a positive image of Islam. One of the learning outcomes of secular universities, critical analytical skills, complicates the matter further by asking believers to divorce themselves from their belief emotionally. In front of non-Muslims and fellow believers, Muslim students (and possibly teachers) may feel uncomfortable in demonstrating intellectual scepticism about their belief, even though they remain firm religiously.

This paper seeks to emphasise the importance of consciousness and engagement in teaching and studying Islam. Drawing on two different patterns of my experience in teaching about Islam as a researcher, and Japanese religious traditions as someone from Japan, I argue that it is unavoidable to take account of the difference in knowledge of religion through participation and observation. In this pluralistic society, it seems more important and realistic to learn constructive ways to cope with disagreements, not only to seek for agreement. Challenging and being challenged through discussion should equip us with an understanding both experientially and intellectually that particular views of the world should not be given privilege.