Pragmatism in Islamic Law Pragmatism in Islamic Law
Middle East Studies Beyond Dominant Paradigms

Pragmatism in Islamic Law

A Social and Intellectual History

    • $24.99
    • $24.99

Publisher Description

In Pragmatism in Islamic Law, Ibrahim presents a detailed history of Sunni legal pluralism and the ways in which it was employed to accommodate the changing needs of society. Since the formative period of Islamic law, jurists have debated whether it is acceptable for a law to be selected based on its utility, rather than weighing conflicting articulations of the law to determine the most likely expression of the divine will. Virtually unanimous opposition to the utilitarian approach, referred to as "pragmatic eclecticism," emerged among early Islamic jurists. However, due to a host of changing institutional and socioeconomic transformations, a trend toward the legitimization of pragmatic eclecticism arose in the thirteenth century. Subsequently, the Mamluk authorities institutionalized this pragmatism when Sultan Baybars appointed four chief judges representing the four Sunni schools in Cairo in 1265 CE. After a brief attempt to reverse Mamluk pluralism by imposing the Hanafi school in the sixteenth century, Egypt’s new rulers, the Ottomans, embraced this pluralistic pragmatism. In examining over a thousand cases from three seventeenth- and eighteenthcentury Egyptian courts, Ibrahim traces the internal logic of pragmatic eclecticism
under the Ottomans. An array of archival sources documents the manner in which Egyptian society’s subaltern classes navigated Sunni legal pluralism as a tool to avoid more austere legal doctrines. The ensuing portrait challenges the assumption made by many modern historians that the utilitarian approaches adopted by nineteenth- and twentieth-century Muslim reformers constituted a clear rupture with early Islamic legal history. In contrast, many of the legal strategies
exercised in Egypt’s partial codification of family law in the twentieth century were rooted in premodern Islamic jurisprudence.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2015
April 27
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
552
Pages
PUBLISHER
Syracuse University Press
SELLER
Ingram DV LLC
SIZE
2.7
MB
Reclaiming Islamic Tradition Reclaiming Islamic Tradition
2016
Modern Islamic Authority and Social Change, Volume 1 Modern Islamic Authority and Social Change, Volume 1
2018
Circuits of Faith Circuits of Faith
2016
Islamic Law and Empire in Ottoman Cairo Islamic Law and Empire in Ottoman Cairo
2016
Islam Without Allah? Islam Without Allah?
2013
Violence in Early Islam Violence in Early Islam
2021
The Persistence of Orientalism The Persistence of Orientalism
2020
Minorities and the Modern Arab World Minorities and the Modern Arab World
2016
The Shi'ites of Lebanon The Shi'ites of Lebanon
2014
Artisan Entrepreneurs in Cairo and Early-Modern Capitalism (1600–1800) Artisan Entrepreneurs in Cairo and Early-Modern Capitalism (1600–1800)
2011
Native Tongue, Stranger Talk Native Tongue, Stranger Talk
2014