An Anxious Inheritance

Religious Others and the Shaping of Sunni Orthodoxy

Aaron W Hughes author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:9th Jun '22

Should be back in stock very soon

An Anxious Inheritance cover

An Anxious Inheritance reveals the tensions between the early framers of Islam and the ever-expandable category of non-Muslims. Examining the encounter with these religious others, and showing how the Qur'an functioned as both a script to understand them and a map to classify them, this study traces the key role that these religious others played in what would ultimately emerge as (Sunni) orthodoxy. This orthodoxy would appear to be the natural outgrowth of the Prophet Muhammad's preaching, but it ultimately amounted to little more than a retroactive projection of later ideas onto the earliest period. Non-Muslims (among them Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians) and the "wrong" kinds of Muslims (e.g., the Shi'a) became integral--by virtue of their perceived stubbornness, infidelity, heresy, or the like--to the understanding of what true religion was not and, just as importantly, what it should be. These non-Muslims were rarely real individuals or groups; rather, they functioned as textual foils that could be conveniently orchestrated, and ultimately controlled, to facilitate Muslim self-definition. Without such religious others proper belief could, quite literally, not be articulated. Shedding new light on the early history of Islam, while also problematizing the binary of orthodoxy/heresy in the study of religion, An Anxious Inheritance makes significant contributions to a number of diverse academic fields.

Hughes's thesis that Sunni Islam reduces non-Muslims and "internal others" to literary fictions is compelling and a challenge to Islamic studies' uncritical acceptance of polemical sources * Mark Durie, Melbourne School of Theology, Middle East Quarterly *

ISBN: 9780197613474

Dimensions: 150mm x 221mm x 25mm

Weight: 499g

272 pages