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On Sociological Polytheism: Reading Crisis in Sayyid Qutb

December 31, 2017 by Tanzeen Doha

Sayyid Qutb was amongst the avant-garde of the cadre of Muslim intellectuals who attempted to address the epistemological crisis. His work operates squarely under the assumption that the state of the Muslim umma is in desperate need of revival. He sought to address how this came to be and suggest ways to actualize an alternative future. Central to this project was his reconceptualization and rearticulation of the long-established term “jāhiliyya.” The following discussion will take Qutb’s conception of jāhiliyya as its point of departure in examining how he grappled with his perception of the larger epistemological crisis facing the Muslim world.

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December 31, 2017 /Tanzeen Doha

Demystifying a Warlord: Conflicting Historical Representations of Ahmad Shah Massoud

September 19, 2017 by Tanzeen Doha

In this work, I argue that the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the devastating civil war that followed was a period of history that defies encapsulation within binaries of “good” and “evil”. This work examines conflicting historical representations of Ahmad Shah Massoud and his role in these two destructive wars. It aims to demystify the image of a warlord.

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September 19, 2017 /Tanzeen Doha

The Ghosts of 9-1-1: Reflections on History, Justice and Roosting Chickens*

September 11, 2017 by Tanzeen Doha

Why should “they” hate “us”? The very question is on its face absurd, delusional, revealing of an aggregate detachment from reality so virulent in its evasiveness as to be deemed clinically pathological. Setting aside the wholly-contrived “confusion” professed in the aftermath as to who might be properly included under the headings “we” and “they,” the sole legitimate query that might have been posed on 9-1-1 was—and remains—“How could ‘they’ possibly not hate ‘us’?"

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September 11, 2017 /Tanzeen Doha

The Illusion of Realism: What is the Future of Muslim Politics?

July 24, 2017 by Tanzeen Doha

In our so-called “post-ideological” world, even the most sincere observers have fallen trap to a myth perpetuated by the liberal order: that strategic political action or realpolitik transcends (or is devoid of) ideology. A case in point is the Tunisian Nahda movement’s decision to separate its political activities (primarily its political party) and its da’wah based activities. In 2016 the Nahda movement announced its shift from an “ideological movement engaged in the struggle for identity, to a protest movement against the authoritarian regime, and now to a national democratic party."

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July 24, 2017 /Tanzeen Doha

The Mantle, Mimesis, and the Muslimeen: How Poetic Narratives Transform Objects for the Islamic World

June 23, 2017 by Tanzeen Doha

Using the Prophet’s mantle as a case study can shed light on the ways in which Islamic relic veneration encompasses a number of paradoxical relationships, namely the connection between the inaccessible and accessible. As an object at the crossroads of different disciplines and art forms, the Holy Mantle has a far-reaching impact that reveals much about the efficacy of such relics in reaching Muslims globally, especially when they have been translated across verbal channels.

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June 23, 2017 /Tanzeen Doha

Uyghur Names as Signal and Noise

June 02, 2017 by Tanzeen Doha

In order to accomplish the mission of the “People’s War on Terror,” the Party Secretary of the university Zhou Xuyong declared that all “static” (zaoyin) and “noise” (zayin) would need to be eliminated. Anyone who demonstrated the slightest resonance with unapproved Islamic ideologies was to be purified through a process of “reverse osmosis” (fan shentou). He said the goal was to create an atmosphere in which Uyghur Islamic “extremists” scurried across the street like rats while the public surrounded them screaming their disapproval and beating them in righteous anger.

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June 02, 2017 /Tanzeen Doha

Deadly Milestone

May 08, 2017 by Tanzeen Doha

In the rest of this essay, we examine the consequences of the May 2013 massacre in Dhaka, Bangladesh. We collected written memories, reflections, poems, novellas, videos, other literary and non-literary artifacts in the aftermath of the massacre. These are some of the forms in which the massacre is memorialized within the Islamist counterpublic. These materials are the remaining traces — like dried blood — of the actual sets of events.  It is a living archive that not only allows an immanent embodied critique of a secular society, but provides a marginal possibility for a realist speculation in retrospect.

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May 08, 2017 /Tanzeen Doha
2013 Rabaa massacre, 2013 Shapla Square protests, The Volta, Talal Asad, national secularism, decolonial violence, The Shahbag movement in Bangladesh, Hefazat-e-Islam, Sayyid Qutb's Milestones, Faisal Devji's Poetry of the Taliban, Afghan Taliban poetry, Deoband tradition, liberal-secularist public sphere, The Cultural Committee of the Islamic Emirate, British colonialism, Mullah Omar, Osama Bin Laden, Taliban militants and sympathizers, non-religious literature, Soviet and American imperialists, Prophet Muhammad published in the secularist blogosphere, Operation Flushout, Business District in Dhaka, Islamic journalists, Islamic students and clerics, Islamist counterpublic, Qawmi madrassa student, modernity, Muslims prisoner, War on Terror, Shaker Aamer, Guantanamo Bay military prison, Islamic piety, postmodern or postcolonial critiques, the fetish of Man, Tanzeen R. Doha, Iftekhar Jamil, Wael Hallaq, Frantz Fanon

Blackness and Futurity: Malcolm X

February 21, 2017 by Tanzeen Doha

Malcolm’s leave to the Hajj is vital. A series of circumstantial instances placed him within a worldly, proximal corporeality, a rich hapticality of the flesh, with an illuminated, emphatic sense of fungibility more external than what reciprocity could provide. Where reciprocity, the vehicle for recognition, is, to its own freely detestable demise, non-exchangeable, the one who lives for recognition nullifies, in the end, from the start, the capacity to attain a freedom independent of the body. He frequents the times he was met with unconditional hospitality and appreciation on behalf of Muslims across complexion and convention.

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February 21, 2017 /Tanzeen Doha
Black Nationalism, America, Malcolm's militancy, Malcolm X, African-Americans, ghettos, Black Muslims, political death, Aime Cesaire, James Baldwin, Al-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, Malcolm's letter from Mecca, James Goodwin, Fred Moten, Simone Weil, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Martin Heidegger

The Syrian War and the Western Left’s Myopia

January 28, 2017 by Tanzeen Doha

Syria's brutal repression of mass demonstrations across Syria in 2011 marked a decisive model of how authoritarian Arab regimes could avoid the fate of Ben Ali in Tunisia and Mubarak in Egypt (and later, Gaddafi in Libya), who were seemingly swept away by popular revolutions, led by a coalition of leftist youth, liberal, constitutionalist reformers, and moderate, democratic Islamists, such as Ennadha and the Muslim Brothers. Bashar al-Assad and his 'Alawi generals and security officials were determined to eradicate the possibility of mass popular participation in political life, which would have made Baathist and 'Alawi control of the Syrian state and economy impossible.

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January 28, 2017 /Tanzeen Doha
The Western Left, The Syrian War, Muslim refugees, The Monthly Review, Counterpunch, The Jacobin, invasion of Iraq, Ben Ali in Tunisia, Mubarak in Egypt, Gaddafi in Libya, Bashar al-Assad, The Arab Spring, Ba'thist facisim, secular nationalists, The Islamic State, The Assad Regime, religious tolerance, The Middle East, Alawi Arab community, The Gulf War, secular Arab nationalists, Sunni Muslims, Christians, Shi'i Muslims, Yemen's Houthis, Islamists, Richard Wood, Muslim lands, Western imperialism, Tanzeen R. Doha
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