Introduction Part I Expansion 1. A Cultural Revolution 2. Islam in the Late 1960s 3. Building Petro-Islam on the Ruins of Arab Nationalism 4. Islamism in Egypt, Malaysia, and Pakistan 5. Khomeini's Revolution and Its Legacy 6. Jihad in Afghanistan and Intifada in Palestine 7. Islamization in Algeria and the Sudan 8. The Fatwa and the Veil in Europe 185 Part II Decline 9. From the Gulf War to the Taliban Jihad 10. The Failure to Graft Jihad on Bosnia's Civil War 11. The Logic of Massacre in the Second Algerian War 12. The Threat of Terrorism in Egypt 13. Osama bin Laden and the War against the West 14. Hamas, Israel, Arafat, and Jordan 15. The Forced Secularization of Turkish Islamists Conclusion Notes Glossary Maps Abbreviations Index
A comprehensive history of Islamist political movements, Jihad charts the evolution of Jihadism and assess its rise, fall and future.
Gilles Kepel is one of the world's foremost experts on the current Middle East and is director of research at the CNRS in Paris, and Professor at the Institute for Political Studies in Paris, France.
I read this in Pakistan, over a period of weeks shortly after the
9/11 attacks. Its sweep across the broad landscape of radical Sunni
activism was a revelation. The book is one of the few genuinely
rigorous academic overviews of the social and historical roots of
the phenomenon of modern Muslim extremism ranging geographically
from the far east to Europe, and chronologically from the 1960s
onwards that also remains readable. Its primary thesis that violent
Islamic militancy is in large part a response to the failure of
political Islamist activism has stood the test of time. Kepel is
famous in France but almost unknown outside. This is a shame. A
classic.
*The Guardian*
Deeply researched, deeply measured and deeply instructive – the
best survey available and likely to remain so
*Sunday Times*
Kepel's work... spans the world of political Islam, from the
assassination of Egypt's President Anwar Sadat, to the
establishment of Osama bin Laden's terrorist network in
Afghanistan. He has the knack of explaining how events in one part
of the Islamic world have affected developments elsewhere
*The Daily Telegraph*
No-one else has attempted so bold an overview of the Islamist
phenomenon. Of all the books on this subject, this is the most
challenging and the most illuminating
*The Economist*
Simply excellent
*Prospect*
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