Più di un milione di libri, a un clic di distanza!
Maxime RodinsonLibri
26 gennaio 1915 – 23 maggio 2004
Questo storico e sociologo marxista si specializzò in studi orientali e divenne professore di lingue etiopi. La sua produzione accademica esplorò un ricco panorama di soggetti, inclusi movimenti religiosi e politici. Rodinson fu noto per il suo coinvolgimento nella politica di sinistra e più tardi emerse come un notevole critico delle politiche israeliane. Alcuni gli attribuiscono l'invenzione del termine "fascismo islamico" per descrivere fenomeni rivoluzionari.
Presents a rebuttal of the cultural reductionism of Max Weber and others who
have tried to explain the politics and society of the Middle East by reference
to some unchanging entity called 'Islam,' typically characterised as
instinctively hostile to capitalism. This work looks at the facts, analysing
economic texts with his customary common sense.
A classic secular history of the prophet Muhammad that vividly recreates the fascinating time in which Islam was born. Maxime Rodinson, both a maverick Marxist and a distinguished professor at the Sorbonne, first published his biography of Muhammad in 1960. The book, a classic in its field, has been widely read ever since. Rodinson, though deeply versed in scholarly studies of the Prophet, does not seek to add to it here but to introduce Muhammad, first of all, as “a man of flesh and blood” who led a life of extraordinary drama and shaped history as few others have. Equally, he seeks to lay out an understanding of Muhammad’s legacy and Islam as what he called an ideological movement, similar to the universalist religions of Christianity and Buddhism as well as the secular movement of Marxism, but possessing a singular commitment to “the deeply ingrained idea that Islam offers not only a path to salvation but (for many, above all) the ideal of a just society to be realized on earth.” Rodinson’s book begins by introducing the specific land and the larger world into which Muhammad was born and the development of his prophetic calling. It then follows the steps of his career and the way his leadership gave birth to a religion and a state. A final chapter considers the world as Islam has transformed it.
In his trademark polemical style, Maxime Rodinson examines the complexities of
political Islam and Marxist ideology and their implications for Arab
nationalism.
Les Arabes sont au premier plan de l'actualité. Tout le monde en parle. Mais qui sont-ils ? Les images se succèdent et se bousculent, infiniment variées, contrastées, léguées par le passé ou issues du présent : guerriers valeureux, Bédouins pillards, potentats milliardaires, sous-prolétaires misérables, dévots et mystiques d'un Islam fanatique, politiciens subtils, terroristes implacables, etc. Maxime Rodinson, qui étudie ce peuple et sa culture depuis près d'un demi-siècle, a voulu présenter avec sympathie, mais sans attendrissement suspect, sans complaisance servile, en se refusant aux facilités du pathétique littéraire, une somme d'informations objectives : délimitation et extension du peuple, origines ethniques et culturelles de chacune de ses composantes, ressources et freins sur la voie de son développement, évolution du concept de peuple arabe, puis de l'idéologie du nationalisme arabe contemporain, constantes des structures sociales, politiques, culturelles. Il n'hésite pas ainsi à ébranler bien des idées reçues tant parmi les Arabes que chez les non-Arabes.