Beyond the “Conflict” Paradigm Western-Muslim Interactions and Intersections

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Aziz Douai

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Abstract

Western-Muslim relations have experienced long periods of peaceful coexistence,
fruitful co-operation, and close interactions that have enriched both civilizations.
And yet an alien observer of our mainstream media could be forgiven
for concluding that “Islam” and the “West” can never co-exist in peace because
they seem to have nothing in common. In fact, the intermittent violence interrupting
these long peaceful interactions – from the Crusades to the “War on
Terror” – has constituted the core of most mainstream media coverage and
“scholarship” purporting to “study” and “explain” these relations.
In a zero-sum power game, these dominant frameworks emphasize that
such a “clash” is inevitable. Samuel Huntington’s “Clash of Civilizations”
theory has become the best known articulation and deployment of “conflict”
as an “explanatory” framework for understanding current and past Muslim-
West interactions. Simply put, existential, cultural, and religious chasms
have put the Muslim world on a collision course with the western world, a
problem that is most exacerbated by the presence of “Islam” and Muslim
communities in western societies (Huntington, 1993).1 His thesis appears
to ignore each civilization’s internal diversity and pluralism and to be willfully
oblivious to the inter- and intra-civilizational interactions and centuriesold
co-existence, as Edward Said argued in his rebuttal: “Clash of Ignorance”
(2001). 


Beyond the broadest generalizations, after all, what do “Islam” and the
“West” mean? How long can we afford to “ignore” the “porousness” and “ambiguity”
of their geographical and cultural borders? Is “conflict” between these
two realms inevitable? How about the centuries-old dialogue between these
civilizations, the “Self” and the “Other”? How can researchers and intellectuals
deploy their inter-disciplinary insights and scholarship to address both the
real and the perceived civilizational “chasms”?
These questions constitute the overarching themes of some very important
scholarship published in three recent books: Engaging the Other: Public Policy
and Western-Muslim Intersections, edited by Karim H. Karim and Mahmoud
Eid; Re-Imagining the Other: Culture, Media, and Western-Muslim Intersections,
edited by Mahmoud Eid and Karim H. Karim; and the Routledge Handbook
of Islam in the West, edited by Roberto Tottoli. With rich methodological
approaches, broad theoretical lenses, and diverse topics, these three books offer
a unique platform to build both a holistic and nuanced understanding of the
contingencies and intricacies surrounding “Islam” and the “West.” ...

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