Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Sunday, December 3, 2017

New Article: ''Remarks on Allen Feldman’s Archives of the Insensible'' (2017)

Talal Asad contributed to Social Text's online forum on Allen Feldman's Archives of the Insensible: Of War, Photopolitics, and Dead Memory (Duke UP, 2015).

Asad's response is copied below. Dossier has further contributions by Jonathan Beller and Drucilla Cornell, together with a reply by Feldman to his critiques.
p.s.1. Asad also wrote a blurb for the book at the time of its publication, here 
p.s.2. There is a recent interview with Feldman on his book, conducted by this humble blogger and Asif Akhtar, available through Naked Punch.



April 19, 2017

Remarks on Allen Feldman’s 
Archives of the Insensible


I am struck by the rich and provocative detail of this remarkable book and by the disturbing insights it offers into the performance of violence in our time and how its representations make it banal and acceptable. My observations arising from reading this impressive book will be brief.
(1) The very first sentence of Allen’s book reads: “Archives of the Insensibleexplores war as a regime of truth, and truth claiming as forms of war.” 1 The constituents of war and peace are, in other words, interchangeable–even as justice and violence are fused. The language of the law, as Robert Cover reminded us, is profoundly dependent on violence, making that kind of violence in turn legitimate and legitimating. But beyond that, the language of the sovereign state and that of the consumer market together divert our senses and our feelings in the way the powers want them to be diverted. What puzzles me, however, is not so much how truth inhabits political and economic warfare or how truth claiming mimics it, but how we arrive at our sense of what war truly is. The truth, it is said, is the denial of a lie–or an assertion that something previously asserted is impossible. This latter kind of negation is, when continued as discourse, part of what is known in the Christian tradition as negative theology, and the dynamic language of negation it uses is known by the Greek term apophasis, a language central to mystical discourse in a variety of traditions. Allen has made creative (secular) use of this notion in his book to demonstrate how violence is made to appear the rejection of violence.
I’ll come back to the question of what war in our time is, but first I want to cite a striking paragraph from Hannah Arendt: “During the war, the lie most effective with the whole of the German people was the slogan of ‘the battle of destiny for the German people’ [der Schicksalskampf des deutschen Volkes], coined either by Hitler or by Goebbels, which made self-deception easier on three counts: it suggested, first, that the war was no war; second, that it was started by destiny and not by Germany; and, third, that it was a matter of life and death for Germans, who must annihilate their enemies or be annihilated.” 2 So one might ask: Is the Global War on Terror not a war? Was it started by destiny? Is the choice before America: annihilate or be annihilated? What emerges strikingly—and Allen pursues this point ably in his book–is that the untruths of war are more interesting–and more consequential–than the truth of war. They certainly problematize the violence/anti-violence couple and push us into the middle of the deceptions of language. Thus after the Second World War every “Ministry of War” was renamed “Ministry of Defense,” at once a compliment to international law and a threadbare ruse—in that every war is claimed to be reactive and to be aiming at the restoration of the peace broken by destiny.
(2) Who doesn’t know the Clausewitzian formula, “War is nothing but a continuation of political intercourse, with a mixture of other means,” and its Foucauldian inversion, “politics is war by other means”? Both Clausewitz and Foucault blur the distinction; both imply, paradoxically, that politics indicates peace and that politics is not essentially different from war. Yet for the formulas to work against one another war must be identified as such, and not only by the legal criteria that define its beginning.
I have two questions that puzzle me. First: What is the difference between war and war games carried out in peacetime? And second: What is the difference between, on the one hand, military maneuvers and, on the other, virtual war games (i.e., videos used for training military operatives as well as for entertainment at home)? To the extent that videos are essential for drone attacks, video games become part of a continuous series of assassinations; these killings are not punishment, not a response to an imminent threat; they are part of a game “to detect, deter, disrupt, detain or destroy (civilian) networks before they can harm.” The American Global War on Terror is a failure (because terrorists continue to multiply as a consequence of the terrorizing of innocent villagers in the Middle East, and the growing fear of Euro-American populations, all of which enables the morphing of the liberal state into a security state, in which video games can be played safely at home, and police can use IT programs to predict where potential criminals might be lurking. The police program called “Stingray” is used to identify cell phones; originally invented for identifying militants in Afghanistan and Iraq, it is modeled on the children’s game called “Marco Polo.”
So how should one categorize the endless Global War on Terror? Not as police work, certainly, because no due process is involved. Nor is it politics-by-violent-means because it has no equal antagonist who plays the same game. Allen’s book makes one think that the Global War on Terror is perhaps best described as the relentless diffusion of cruelty because cruelty is at home both in war and in peace, and because, like war, it is defined and justified by law.
The stated objective of the Global War on Terror is not, as in conventional war, to get the enemy to concede defeat but to identify, locate, and annihilate him. In his book about drones, Gregoire Chamayou shows how the art of tracking is based on an intensive use of new technologies—including aerial video surveillance, the interception of signals, and cartographic tracking—have nonviolent as well as violent uses. The military profession of manhunters has developed its own technical language for that war: Social Network Analysis, High Value Individuals, Nexus Topography, and so forth. Chamayou writes:
In this model, the enemy individual is no longer seen as a link in a hierarchical chain of command: he is a knot or ‘node’ inserted into a number of social networks. Based on the concepts of ‘network-centric warfare’ and ‘effects-based operations,’ the idea is that by successfully targeting its key nodes, an enemy network can be disorganized to the point of being practically wiped out. The masterminds of this methodology declare that ‘targeting a single key node in a battlefield system has second, third, n-order effects, and that these effects can be accurately calculated to ensure maximum success. 3
The profession of man hunters cannot be limited by “civilian/warrior” and “immune space/battlefield” binaries.
(3) It is often said that this kind of warfare is entirely new, quite unlike anything in the past. And yet, there are genealogical precedents—minus the highly sophisticated technology that is essential to the Global War on Terror. As a total pattern the Global War on Terror may be new, but some of its elements are not.
A book entitled Small Wars, published in 1896 by Colonel C.E. Callwell, an officer in the British imperial army, opens as follows:
Small war is a term which has come largely into use of late years, and which is admittedly somewhat difficult to define. Practically it may be said to include all campaigns other than those where both the opposing sides consist of regular troops. It comprises the expeditions against savages and semi-civilized races by disciplined soldiers, it comprises campaigns undertaken to suppress rebellions and guerilla warfare in all parts of the world where organized armies are struggling against opponents who will not meet them in the open field, and it thus obviously covers operations very varying in scope and in their conditions. 4
In the chapter that follows these remarks, Callwell proceeds to classify small wars in terms of their intention:
Small wars may broadly be divided into three classes—campaigns of conquest or annexation, campaigns for the suppression of insurrections or lawlessness or for the settlement of conquered or annexed territory, and campaigns undertaken to wipe out an insult, to avenge a wrong, or to overthrow a dangerous enemy. Each class of campaign will generally be found to have certain characteristics affecting the whole course of the military operations which it involves. 5
The word “justice” doesn’t appear directly, but what Bush-Obama regards as the necessity of violence to justice is evident here too. Yet unlike Bush-Obama, the language used by Callwell doesn’t claim victimhood for empire. Small wars integrate several elements. Especially in the history of North America, Australasia, Africa (and today Israel), the legal intentions of annexation, suppression of revolt, and settlement of new land are infused with a sense of insult and an awareness of a dangerous enemy as legal causes.
Barely 50 years later, there appeared the encyclopedic Small Wars Manualassigned to the United States Marine Corps and written by a number of American officers who drew on the considerable experience of U.S. campaigns in East Asia and Latin America. They distinguish small wars from conventional warfare by drawing on the Clausewitzian idea of war as an extension of politics by other means: as they note, in the latter, violent combat begins when diplomacy fails, but in the former the two continue together. So in small wars, political leaders deal with the details of military violence whereas in conventional war, tactics and strategy are left principally if not entirely to generals. Small wars also require a different psychology among the soldiers engaged in hostilities. I quote from the introduction to the Manual:
In a conventional conflict one arouses courage in troops by instilling hatred of the enemy. In a small war, it is necessary to be ruthless and firm at times; yet the Marines will be dealing with the native population as well as the enemy (though the distinction between the two is not always clear) and their relations with the people has to be tolerant, sympathetic, and kind.” 6
Since the events in Afghanistan whose representations Allen analyses so provocatively in his book must count as “ruthless and firm” (not to mention the assaults on Gaza by the IDF), and since the distinction between the native population and the enemy is not always clear, it is not surprising that the ruthlessness and firmness “clones” (in W.J.T. Mitchell’s useful verb), rather than eliminates, the enemy. The language for narrating war is now burdened by a liberal vocabulary that is conspicuously absent in the imperial British manual from the late nineteenth century. Callwell never uses words like “tolerant, sympathetic, and kind,” as the American Marine manual from the mid-twentieth century does – something that makes the small wars aesthetically, and not merely temporally, closer to the Global War on Terror. The unending state violence in pursuit of security does not exclude moments of tolerance, sympathy, and kindness.
But there remains a crucial difference between the imperial small wars and the Global War on Terror: the former were not driven by a terrified population.
(4) Before I conclude my comments I want to turn to Hannah Arendt on violence and cruelty. Arendt points out (in On Revolution) that the moral authority invoked in making a revolution is based on the claim that violence is essential for the promotion of a great and noble aim. That violence, as we know, has been a source of great suffering toward human as well as nonhuman life in modern times. Of course, violence and cruelty as such didn’t begin with modernity. Their novelty, as Arendt has memorably shown, derives from the fact that they are now seen as necessary to a transcendent project—not only in war but also in what is called peace. The Nazi genocide of Jews and Gypsies and the Russian Revolution’s devouring of its own children are horrific examples involving the imprisonment of populations, as well as their mass murder or expulsion; less widely known is the mass expulsion of Palestinians from conquered areas absorbed into the Jewish state in 1947-48. In each case the ultimate aim is the glorious achievement of justice and security, but through very different kinds of revolutionary movement.
But such justified cruelty occurs not only in political revolutions; it also underlies much of ordinary life in the modern world. Here is one example: progressives celebrate the fact that the large urban populations of the modern world now have access to plentiful supplies of cheap and nourishing food—thanks to industrial agriculture that treats animals grown for meat, milk and eggs in accordance with the methods of mass production—and yet little attention is paid to the fact that this achievement involves unprecedented cruelty. We do not commonly refer to these conditions as a horror because we think that only cruelty toward human life deserves that epithet. But horror is the emotion roused by direct acquaintance with these conditions or with vivid description of them. Kindness, sympathy, and tolerance are old attitudes, but forms of cruelty toward living beings promoted by industrial capitalism and modern sovereignty are new, less visible, not intended by consumers—and therefore more entrenched than ever.
As so often in liberal society, cruelty can be justified as unintended, or as the lesser of two evils. Liberal ethics assumes that for something to be judged immoral it must be identifiable as an individual act, carried out with a clear intention, and related negatively to specific virtues. Even in modern criminal law the subjective factor is paramount: the intent to kill innocents or make them suffer is essential in determining whether a serious violation of the law has occurred, and how the criminal is to be punished—and punishment, of course, is intended to inflict further cruelty, but this time “justly” by the law.
(5) I end with a general question: Why is it that the kind of critique Allen has presented so powerfully in Archives of the Insensible doesn’t persuade more widely? What makes the cruelties of the Global War on Terror, abroad and at home, incapable of being critically thought by most liberals? Fear, it seems, justifies everything. Because if the cruelties were seen as Allen reveals them to be, the sense of horror might be unbearable.
References
Arendt, Hannah. 1994. Eichmann in Jerusalem (Revise and Expanded Edition). New York: Penguin Books.
Callwell, Colonel C.E. (1906) 1996. Small Wars: Their Principles and Practice, third edition. London and Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.
Chamayou, Grégoire. 2015. A Theory of the Drone. New York: The New Press.
Feldman, Allen. 2015. Archives of the Insensible: Of War, Photopolitics, and Dead Memory. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
United State Marine Corps. 1940. Small Wars Manual. Manhattan, Kansas: Sunflower University Press.
  1. Feldman, Archives of the Insensible, 1. 
  2. Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem, 52. 
  3. Chamayou, A Theory of the Drone, 34. 
  4. Callwell, Small Wars, 21. 
  5. Ibid., 25 
  6. United States Marine Corp, Small Wars Manual, ix. 

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Blurbs

Talal Asad's Blurbs


Praise for Race and the Education of Desire: Foucault’s History of Sexuality and the Colonial Order of Things by Ann Laura Stoler (Duke UP, 1995)

"Race and the Education of Desire is a tour de force. Stoler has engaged in a productive dialogue with Foucault’s seminal text, and interwoven that dialogue with an illuminating analysis of the concepts and policies of imperial racism. This book should have a major impact on scholarly discussions of modern imperialism and racism." [JHU]

***

Praise for Egypt: The Moment of Change, edited by Rabab El-Mahdi and Philip Marfleet (Zed Books, 2009)

'Egypt is often referred to in the Western media as "a moderate Arab state" solely on the grounds of its friendly relations with the United States and Israel. But there is nothing moderate about its poverty, corruption, and political repression, as this book so ably demonstrates. Egypt: The Moment of Change is a valuable contribution to understanding the uncertain predicament of this important country.' [CUNY]

***

Praise for A Reader in the Anthropology of Religion edited by Michael Lambek (Blackwell, 2002)

"This is an excellent collection, with a comprehensive range of readings from classical as well as recent authors, and very useful introductions to each section that are also accessibly written. In my view this fine Reader should be adopted as a standard text for teaching the anthropology of religion." [CUNY]

*** 

Praise for Facts on the Ground: Archaeological Practice and Territorial Self-Fashioning in Israeli Society by Nadia Abu El-Haj (Chicago UP, 2002)

"A fascinating and importnat study. Factually detailed and theoretically informed by the latest thinking in the anthropology and sociology of science, Nadia Abu El-Haj provided us with an understanding of precisely how archeology has contributed so crucially to the formation of nationalist sensibilities in a settler-colonial society." [CUNY]

***

Praise for Regulating Aversion: Tolerance in the Age of Identity and Empire by Wendy Brown (Princeton UP, 2008)

''This is a brilliant book. Wendy Brown has made the reader understand 'tolerance' in a new and more provocative way. Alerting us to its genealogy, she demonstrates the ambiguity of any politics that seeks to found itself on this much-touted liberal virtue. Regulating Aversion is a remarkable--and remarkably rigorous--contribution to the considerable literature on tolerance and the limits of the tolerable. Anyone wanting to think seriously about multiculturalism, cosmopolitanism, and democratic pluralism in our time must read it.'' [CUNY]

***

Praise for Islamic Liberation Theology: Resisting the Empire by Hamid Dabashi (Routledge, 2008) 

''This is a wide-ranging and trenchant critique of the ideological thinking behind American imperialism in the Middle East. But beyond that, it makes the intriguing argument that the world has already entered a phase of revolutionary resistance transcending the old ‘Islam vs. the West’ cliché. Anyone interested in the current debates about the future of America’s global hegemony will profit from reading this original and passionately written book.'' [CUNY]

***

Praise for Desiring Arabs by Joseph A. Massad (Chicago UP, 2007)

“This is a remarkable book, at once a fascinating history of ideas and a brilliantly analyzed case study of cultural imperialism. There are many excellent studies of Western representations of Arab and Muslim peoples, but there is nothing comparable on the way the latter have responded to the former. With impressive learning and sharp wit Massad describes the internalization of European conceptions of the human among Arab intellectuals, both nationalist and Islamist, since the nineteenth century. His account of their concern to re-orient sexual and civilizational desires (both being closely intertwined in the European imagination) is quite stunning. Anyone interested in the modernization of Middle Eastern culture cannot afford to miss this book—nor, for that matter can scholars seriously engaged in postcolonial research or in lesbian and gay studies.” [CUNY]

***

Praise for Semites: Race, Religion, Literature by Gil Anidjar (Stanford UP, 2007)

“In this fascinating collection of essays, Gil Anidjar traces the Western conception of the outsider, the enemy, through the once-familiar notion of the Semite. He invites his readers to ponder the remarkable fact that although the category of ‘Semite’ is now scarcely used in its original sense (Arabs and Jews as Europe’s joint Other), its negative, ‘anti-Semite’ (meaning anti-Jews), is very much alive in religious and political discourses in Euro-America. Anidjar is a master of Derridean deconstruction, a provocative analyst of the role of Western Christianity in the formation of contemporary hostilities. This elegant book will upset many complacencies.”

***
Praise for The State of the University: Academic Knowledges and the Knowledge of God by Stanley Hauerwas (Wiley-Blackwell, 2007)

‘‘This book by an eminent Christian theologian is provocative for think- ing fruitfully about our troubled times. Hauerwas has a subtle, learned, and compassionate mind, which he brings to bear on the secular state in which we live and on the secular knowledge produced in our universities to serve it. Non-Christians like myself will find reading this book a mind-widening experience.’’

***

Praise for The Great Social Laboratory: Subjects of Knowledge in Colonial and Postcolonial Egypt by Omnia El Shakry (Stanford UP, 2007)

“This excellent and well-researched book recounts the formation and application of colonial knowledge—especially of ethnography, human geography, and demography—in the attempts to modernize and govern Egypt. It makes a significant contribution to the important debate about colonial modernity that has so far been largely confined to India.”


***

Praise for The Crisis of Secularism in India edited by A.D. Needham and R.S. Rajan (DUKE UP, 2006)

“Indian public debates on the question of secularism have been among the most thought-provoking in the contemporary world. This rich collection of essays by Indian intellectuals (including historians, political scientists, and philosophers) reflects the sophisticated character of many of the arguments being deployed. I strongly recommend it to anyone who has been seriously thinking about this problem.”

***

Praise for Islam in Europe: The Lure of Fundamentalism and the Allure of Cosmopolitanism by Nilüfer Göle (Markus Wiener 2011)

''Nilüfer Göle is a leading sociologist who is as familiar with France as she is with Turkey, and therefore with the sensibilities of their respective citizens. In this book, the fruit of many years reading and observation, she traces the civilizational challenges posed by the contemporary encounter between Muslims and non-Muslims in Europe. A central question that she asks is whether Europe is an identity or a project, and it is clear that she hopes it is first and foremost the latter. Written with rare insight and generosity of spirit, Göle's book offers readers a meditation on one way in which people from very different traditions can live together without animus in an interconnected modern world.''

***

Praise for Imperial Encounters: Religion and Modernity in India and Britain by Peter van der Veer (Princeton UP, 2001)

"This is a splendid book. Peter van der Veer has drawn on a wide range of fascinating readings to elaborate the post-colonial thesis that the modern histories of Britain and India have been mutually constitutive. I believe he is absolutely right in insisting on the fact--and demonstrating it so ably--that modern ideas like nation, religion, and race must be understood, if they are to be understood fully, through an interactional approach. Anyone interested in recent thinking about the joint history of colonialism and modernity should not miss this work."

Monday, November 1, 2010

Bibliography

Talal Asad
A Bibliography
 

Compiled by Sheila Smyth 
up to '05, rest is mine [pdf]


2015

'Talal Asad Interviewed by Irfan Ahmad' Public Culture 2015, 27:2, 76: 259-279
Download

''Why do I support the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement?'' in Savage Minds by April 10th, 2015.
Read Here

Thinking About Tradition, Religion, and Politics in Egypt Today, Critical Inquiry [online]
Read Here

'Do Muslims Belong in the West' by Hasan Azad, Jadaliyye zine 2.3.2015
Read Here

2014

"Genealogies of Religion, Twenty Years On: An Interview with Talal Asad" by Craig Martin, Bulletin for the Study of Religion 43, no. 1 (2014): 12-17.
Download


2013

Asad, Talal, Wendy Brown, Judith Butler, and Saba Mahmood. Is critique secular?: blasphemy, injury, and free speech. Oxford University Press, 2013.
- chapters by Asad: ''Free Speech, Blasphemy and Secular Criticism'' and ''Reply to Judith Butler''

“Reflections on Violence, Law, and Humanitarianism,” Critical Inquiry Read Here [published in 2015]

"Neither Heroes, Nor Villains: A Conversation with Talal Asad on Egypt after Morsi" by Ayça Çabukçu in Jadaliyya e-zine, July 23, 2013 - Read Here / Arabic


2012

“Muhammad Asad Between Religion and Politics,” Islam and Science, Vol. 10, No. 1
Read Here

“Fear and the ruptured state: reflections on Egypt after Mubarak,” Social Research, vol. 79, no. 2.
Download

“Thinking about Religion, Belief, and Politics,” Robert Orsi, (ed.), Cambridge Companion to Religious Studies, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Download


2011

“The Secular Body, Pain, and Liberal Politics,” Cultural Anthropology, Vol. 26, Issue 4
Download

"The Suspicious Revolution: An Interview with Talal Asad" by Nathan Schneider in Jadaliyya e-zine, August 21, 2011 - Read Here

''Cosmopolitanism and Peace'' [Review of Ghazi-Bouillan's 'Understanding the Middle East Peace Process'] in anthropology NOW 3, no. 1 (2011): 102-107.
Download

'Modernizing Middle Eastern Studies, Historicizing Religion, Particularizing Human Rights: An Interview with Talal Asad' by Janell Watson in the minnesota review 2011 Volume 2011, Number 77: 87-100
Download


2010

''Thinking about terrorism and just war'' Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Volume 23, Number 1, March 2010
Download

''A Colloquium on the Origin of Human Rights with Talal Asad'' at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, February 2, 2010 website

2009

Is critique secular?: blasphemy, injury, and free speech, Talal Asad. et al., University of California Press, 2009.
DOWNLOAD
read Gourgouris - Mahmood Debate here

"Response to Gil Anidjar," Interventions, Volume 11, Issue 3 November 2009 , pages 394 - 399
WEB
see Anidjar's article in the same issue 
“The Idea of an Anthropology of Christianity” (on Talal Asad) 

''The Idea of an Anthropology of Islam'' republished in Qui Parle Vol. 17, No. 2 link

''Religion, law, and the politics of human rights: Talal Asad and Abdullahi An-Na’im in conversation'' SSRC September 29, 2009 - Read Here

2008

عن التفجيرات الانتحارية [On Suicide Bombing in Arabic]

"Interview" in the section 'Secularism and Islam', The Present as History: Critical Perspectives on Global Power, edited by Nermeen Shaikh, published by Columbia UP, 2008. (video)

"Historical notes on the idea of secular criticism" published in The Immanent Frame
Read Here


2007
On Suicide Bombing (The Wellek Library Lectures), Columbia University Press, 2007
Spanish, Japanese,

Google Books
The creation of terror and the perpetration of atrocities are aspects of militant action in the unequal world we inhabit, of our notions of what is cruel and what is necessary, and of the emotions with which we justify or condemn particular acts of death-dealing. I do not plead that terrorist atrocities may sometimes be morally justified. I am simply impressed by the fact that modern states are able to destroy and disrupt life more easily and on a much grander scale than ever before, and that terrorists cannot reach this capability. I am also struck by the ingenuity with which so many politicians, public intellectuals, and journalists provide moral justifications for killing and demeaning other human beings. This book does not pretend to offer solutions to moral dilemmas about institutionalized violence. It makes no case for accepting some kinds of cruelty as opposed to others. Its hope, rather, is to disturb the reader sufficiently so that he or she can take a distance from the complacent public discourse that pre-packages moral responses to "terrorism," "war," and "suicide bombing." (from the introduction)

"Secularism, hegemony, and fullness" [a response to Charles Taylor's A Secular Age] published in The Immanent Frame Read Here





2006

Powers of the secular modern: Talal Asad and his interlocutors
Edited By David Scott, Charles Hirschkind
Stanford University Press, 2006
Google Books

Table of Contents

1Introduction : the anthropological skepticism of Talal Asad1
2Secularization revisited : a reply to Talal Asad12
3What is an "authorizing discourse"?31
4Fasting for Bin Laden : the politics of secularization in contemporary India57
5Europe : a minor tradition75
6Secularism and the argument from nature93
7On general and divine economy : Talal Asad's genealogy of the secular and Emmanuel Levinas's critique of capitalism, colonialism, and money113
8The tragic sensibility of Talal Asad134
9Redemption, secularization, and politics154
10Subjects and agents in the history of imperialism and resistance180
11Responses206
AppThe trouble of thinking : an interview with Talal Asad243

Talal Asad : a bibliography333



宗教を語りなおす―近代的カテゴリーの再考、みすず書房、2006年 (modern reconsideration of the category of religion)

“Trying to Understand French Secularism.” Political Theologies. Ed. Hent de Vries. New
York: Fordham University Press, 2006. Forthcoming in November 2006.
DOWNLOAD

''A Single History?'' at Open Democracy
READ

Penser la terreur, l’horrible et la mort : entretien avec Talal Asad
DOWNLOAD


2004

“Where Are the Margins of the State?” The State and its Margins. Eds. Veena Das and Deborah Poole. Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press, 2004. 279-288.

Asad, Talal, and Keishi, Nakamura. Shukyo no keifu: kirisutokyo to isuramu ni okeru kenryoku no konkyo to kunren. Tokyo: Iwanamishoten, 2004. Note: In Japanese.


2003

Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2003. Note: Translations contracted with publisher - Italian, Turkish, Arabic, and Japanese.
Google Books

Table of Contents
What might an anthropology of secularism look like? -- Thinking about agency and pain -- Reflections on cruelty and torture -- Redeeming the “human” through human rights -- Muslims as a “religious minority” in Europe -- Secularism, nation state, religion -- Reconfigurations of law and ethics in colonial Egypt.

“Crusading Peace: Christendom, the Muslim Worlds, and Western Political Order.” History of Religions 42.3 (2003): 249-52.
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“Boundaries and Rights in Islamic Law: an Introduction.” Social Research 70.3 (2003): 683-686.
DOWNLOAD


2002
“Muslims and European Identity: Can Europe Represent Islam?” The Idea of Europe: From Antiquity to the European Union. Ed. Anthony Pagden. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press: 2002. 209-227.

“Ethographic Representation, Statistics, and Modern Power.” From the Margins: Historical Anthropology and its Futures. Ed. Brian Keith Axel. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2002. 66-91.
DOWNLOAD

Asad, Talal, Dabashi, H., et al. “Statement Protesting the Sentenced Execution of Professor Hashem Aghajari.” Social Research 69.4 (2002): 9-13.
READ

“Some Thoughts on the WTC Disaster.” ISIM Newsletter 9 (2002): 1; 38.
DOWNLOAD


2001

''Thinking about Secularism and Law in Egypt''. Leiden, Holland: International Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World (ISIM), 2001.
DOWNLOAD

Asad, Talal, Harvey, D., et al. “Local Horror: Global Response.” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 25.4 (2001): 901.
DOWNLOAD

“Reading a Modern Classic: W.C. Smith's ‘The Meaning and End of Religion.” History of Religions 40.3 (2001): 205-222.
DOWNLOAD
Note: Reprinted in Religion and Media, Eds. Hent de Vries and Samuel Weber. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2001.


2000

“Agency and Pain: An Exploration.” Culture and Religion 1.1 (2000): 29-60.
Reprinted in the Formations of the Secular, ch.2
Download

“What Do Human Rights Do? An Anthropological Enquiry.” Theory and Event 4.4 (2000).
Download



1999

“Religion, Nation-State, Secularism.” Nation and Religion: Perspectives on Europe and Asia. Eds. Peter van der Veer and Hartmut Lehmann. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1999. 178-196.
DOWNLOAD

1997

“Remarks on the Anthropology of the Body.” Religion and the Body: Comparative Perspectives on Devotional Practices. Ed. Sarah Coakley. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
DOWNLOAD

Asad, Talal., et al. “Provocation of European Ethnology.” American Anthropologist 99.4 (1997): 713.
DOWNLOAD

“Europe Against Islam: Islam in Europe.” Muslim World 87.2 (1997): 183-95.
Note: First published in Dutch in Nexus 10 (1994).
DOWNLOAD

1996

“Comments on Conversion.” Conversion to Modernities: The Globalization of Christianity. Ed. Peter van der Veer. New York: Routledge, 1996. 263-273.

“Honor - Stewart, FH.” Journal of the American Oriental Society 116.2 (1996): 308-9.
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“On Torture, or Cruel, Inhuman and Degrading Treatment.” Social Research 63.4 (1996): 1081-1109.
DOWNLOAD
Note: Reprinted in Human Rights, Culture & Context, edited by Richard Wilson, London: Pluto Press, 1997; and in Social Suffering. Eds. Arthur Kleinman, Veena Das, and Margaret Lock. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1997.


1995

“A Comment On Translation, Critique, and Subversion.” Between Languages and Cultures: Translation and Cross-Cultural Texts. Eds. A. D. Needham and C. Maier, Pittsburg: University of Pittsburg Press, 1995. 325-332.
DOWNLOAD

“Ideology and Cultural Identity: Modernity and the Third World Presence – Larrain, J.” American Ethnologist 22.4 (1995): 1013-14.
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1994

“Ethnographic Representation, Statistics and Modern Power.” Social Research 61 (1994): 55-88.
DOWNLOAD

1993

Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam.
Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993.
INTRODUCTION
Japanese 

Table of Contents


Introduction1

Genealogies
1The Construction of Religion as an Anthropological Category27
2Toward a Genealogy of the Concept of Ritual55

Archaisms
3Pain and Truth in Medieval Christian Ritual83
4On Discipline and Humility in Medieval Christian Monasticism125

Translations
5The Concept of Cultural Translation in British Social Anthropology171
6The Limits of Religious Criticism in the Middle East: Notes on Islamic Public Argument200

Polemics
7Multiculturalism and British Identity in the Wake of the Rushdie Affair239
8Ethnography, Literature, and Politics: Some Readings and Uses of Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses269

References307

Acknowledgments325

Index327



“A Comment On Aijaz Ahmad's In Theory.” Public Culture 6.1 (1993): 31-39.
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1992

“Religion and politics: An introduction”, Social Research, 59(1), 3
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“Conscripts of Western Civilization?” Dialectical Anthropology: Essays in Honor of Stanley Diamond, vol. 1, Ed. C. Gailey. Gainesville, FL: University Presses of Florida, 1992. 333-351.
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1991

“From the History of Colonial Anthropology to the Anthropology of Western Hegemony.” Colonial Situations: Essays on the Contextualization of Ethnographic Knowledge. Ed. George Stocking. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1991. 314-324.
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1990

“Multiculturalism and British Identity in the Wake of the Rushdie Affair.” Politics & Society 18.4 (1990): 455-80.
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“Ethnography, Literature, and Politics: Some Readings and Uses of Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses.” Cultural Anthropology 5.3 (1990): 239-269.
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1988

“Towards a Genealogy of the Concept of Ritual.” Vernacular Christianity: Essays in the Social Anthropology of Religion Presented to Godfrey Lienhardt. Eds. W. James and D. Johnson. New York: Lilian Barber Press, 1988. 73-87. 1987

“Are There Histories of Peoples Without Europe?” Comparative Studies in Society and History 29.3 (1987): 594-607.
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“Ritual and Discipline in Medieval Christian Monasticism.” Economy and Society 16.2 (1987): 159-203.
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1986

Asad, Talal, Georgetown University, and Center for Contemporary Arab Studies. “The Idea of an Anthropology of Islam.” Occasional Papers. Washington, D.C.: Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, 1986.
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“Medieval Heresy: An Anthropological View.” Social History 11.3 (1986): 345-62.
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“The Concept of Cultural Translation in British Social Anthropology.” Writing Culture. Eds. Clifford, James and George E. Marcus. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1986.
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1985

With J. Dixon. “Translating Europe's Others.” Europe and Its Others. Eds. F. Barker et al. Colchester, UK: University of Essex Press, 1985.


1984

“Primitive States and the Reproduction of Production Relations.” On Social Evolution: Contributions to Anthropological Concepts Held on the Occasion of the 50th Anniversary of the Wiener Institut Institut für Völkerkunde in Vienna, 12th-16th December 1979. Ed. Walter Dostal. Vienna. Horn: F. Berger, 1984.


1983

Asad, Talal and Roger Owen. The Middle East. London, UK: MacMillan, 1983.
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“Notes on Body Pain and Truth in Medieval Christian Ritual.” Economy and Society 12.3 (1983): 287-327.

“Anthropological Conceptions of Religion: Reflections on Geertz.” Man 18.2 (1983): 237-259.
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1982

“Slaves of the White Myth: the Psychology of Neocolonialism - Gladwin, T.” Man 17.1 (1982): 193-4.
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Review of ''The Middle East: An Anthropological Approach by Dale F. Eickelman'' in International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 14, No. 1 (Feb., 1982), pp. 102-103
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1981

“Ideology, Class and the Origin of the Islamic State.” Economy and Society 10.4 (1981): 498-9.
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“Palestinian Society and Politics - Migdal, JS.” Political Studies 29.2 (1981): 317.

Review of Two Works: "The Origins of the Economy - Pryor; Research in Economic-Anthropology, vol 1, 1978 – Dalton, G.” in Third World Quarterly 3.2 (1981): 334-6.
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1980

“Indigenous Anthropology in Non-Western Countries: A Further Elaboration,” Current Anthropology 21, no. 5 (1980): 661–63; as “A Comment on the Idea of a Non-Western Anthropology,” in Indigenous Anthropology in Non-Western Countries: Proceedings of a Burg Wartenstein Symposium, ed. Hussein Fahim (Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, 1982), 284–88.
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With R. Owen. “The Critique of Orientalism: A Reply to Professor Dodd.” British Society for Middle Eastern Studies Bulletin 7.1 (1980): 33-38.
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“Ideology, Class and the Origin of the Islamic State.” Economy and Society 9.4 (1980): 450-473. DOWNLOAD
Note: Translated into Arabic and republished in Al-Mustaqbal Al-Arabi, 22. (1980).

Remarks on Edward Said's Orientalism in the 'Short Notices' section, The English Historical Review, Vol. 95, No. 376 (Jul., 1980), pp. 648
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1979

“British Social Anthropology.” Towards a Marxist Anthropology: Problems and Perspectives. Ed. Stanley Diamond. New York: Mouton, 1979. 367-376.
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“Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter.” Politics of Anthropology: From Colonialism and Sexism Toward a View from Below. The Hague: Mouton, 1979. 85-97.
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“Anthropology and the Analysis of Ideology.” 14.4 Man (1979): 607-627.
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Note: Translated into Italian and reprinted in Materiali Filosofici. 3 (1980).

1978
“Equality in Nomadic Systems?” Critique of Anthropology (1978).
Note: Reprinted in Pastoral Production and Society. Eds. Equipe Ecologie et Anthropologie des Societes Pastorales. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1979.
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1977

“A Village in Upper Egypt.” Gazelle Review of Literature on the Middle East (1977): 82. 1976
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“The British Mandate.” MERIP Reports 53 (1976): 3.

Asad, Talal, Cunnison, Ian, and Lewis G. Hill. “Settlement of Nomadism in the Sudan: A Critique of Present Plans.” Some Aspects of Pastoral Nomadism in the Sudan.[s.l.]. Sudan National Population Committee and the Economic and Social Research Council, 1976. 174-192.

With H. Wolpe. “Concepts of Modes of Production.” Economy and Society 5.4 (1976): 470-506.

"Politics and Religion in Islamic Reform: a Critique of Kedourie's Afghani and Abduh." Review of Middle East Studies 2 (1976).

1976

"Class transformation under the mandate." MERIP Reports (1976): 3-23.
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1975

“Anthropological Texts and Ideological Problems: An Analysis of Cohen on Arab Villages in Israel.” Economy and Society 4.3 (1975): 251-282.  
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Note: Reprinted as “Class Transformation of Palestine Under the Mandate” in MERIP Reports, December l976.
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“The Rise of Arab Nationalism: A Comment.” Israel and the Palestinians. Eds. U. Davis, Andrew Mack and Nira Yuval-Davis. London, UK: Ithaca Press for the Richardson Institute and the Issues Programme at the University of Bradford, 1975. 93-96.
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1974

“The Concept of Rationality in Economic Anthropology.” Economy and Society 3.2 (1974):211-218.

"Marx and Mill: Two Views of Social Conflict and Social Harmony - Duncan, G." Man 9.4 (1974): 640.


1973

Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter. London, UK: Ithaca Press, 1973.
Türkçe,

"Arab Village: Social Structural Study of a Trans-Jordanian Peasant Community - Antoun, RT." Man 8.2 (1973): 328-329.
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“Equality and Inequality in Islam.” Man 8.2 (1973): 305-6.
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“Note on Spirit-Possession Among the Kababish.” Sudan Society (1973).

“The Bedouin as a Military Force: Notes on some aspects of power relations between Nomads and Sedentaries in Historical Perspective.” The Desert and the Sown: Nomads in the Wider Society. Ed. Cynthia Nelson. Berkeley, CA: Institute of International Studies, University of California, 1973. 61-73.
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“Two European Images of Non-European Rule.” Economy and Society 2.3 (1973): 263-277. DOWNLOAD
Note: Reprinted in Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter. New York: Humanities Press, 1973.


1972

“Market Model, Class Structure and Consent: a Reconsideration of Swat Political Organization.” Man 7.1 (1972): 74-94.
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Note: Reprinted in The Anthropology of Politics: A Reader in Ethnography, Theory, and Critique. Ed. Joan Vincent. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers, 2002.

“Political Inequality in the Kababish Tribe.” Essays in Sudan Ethnography: Presented to Sir E. Evans-Pritchard. Eds. I. Cunnison and W. James. London: England, 1972.
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“On the Frontiers of Islam: Two Manuscripts Concerning Sudan Under Turco-Egyptian Rule, 1822-1845 - Hill, R.” Africa 42.2 (1972): 169-70.
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1971

“Shaykh and Effendi: Changing Pattern of Authority among El Shabana of Southern Iraq - Fernea, RA.” Man 6.1 (1971): 144-5.
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1970

The Kababish Arabs: Power, Authority and Consent in a Nomadic Tribe. London, UK: Hurst & Co., 1970. Excerpts from Introduction and Conclusion

“Studies in Social History of Modern Egypt – Baer, G.” Sociology 4.3 (1970): 408.

“Sudanese Ethics - Nordenstam, T.” Africa 40.1 (1970): 85-86.
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“The Memoirs of Babikr Bedri – Bedri, Y and Scott, G.” Africa 40.2 (1970): 185-186
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“Universities in Arab World: French - Waardenburg, JJ.” Sociology 4.3 (1970): 433-4.


1968

The Kababish. Oxford, England: University of Oxford. Doctoral Dissertation, 1968. WEB

Talal Asad University of Oxford. Faculty of Anthropology and Geography.


Thesis (D.Phil.)--University of Oxford, 1968. 1968 iv, 397 leaves, [4] leaves of plates (2 folded) : geneal. tables, maps, photos., ports. ; 27 cm. 

“Bedouin of Negev - Marx, E.” African Social Research 6 (1968): 492-3.


1966

“A Note on History of the Kababish Tribe.” Sudan Notes and Records 47 (1966):79-87.


1965

Review: Buurri al Lamaab by Harold B. Barclay in Sudan Notes and Records Vol. 46, (1965) , pp. 167-170
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1964

"Seasonal Movements of the Kababish Arabs of Northern Kordofan." Sudan Notes and Records 45(1964): 48-58.
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Note: Reprinted in Peoples and Cultures of the 
Middle East: an Anthropological Reader, vol. 1, 
Ed. by L. Sweet. Garden City, New York: Published for the 
American Museum of Natural History Press, 1970.


1960

“Definition of Marriage.” Man 60 (1960): 73-74.
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Works Edited by Talal Asad

Full-time joint editor (1974-92) of Economy and Society. Routledge. London, UK.

Founded and edited, together with Roger Owen, the first three volumes (1975-8) of the Review of Middle East Studies. London: Ithaca Press.

Guest editor of the special issue of Social Research on “Politics and Religion” 59.1 (1992). New School for Social Research, New York.