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{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2017}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2017}}
{{Infobox academic
{{Infobox academic
| name = Talal Asad
| name = Talal Asad
| image =
| image = Professor Talal Asad 01 (cropped).jpg
| alt =
| alt =
| caption =
| caption = Talal Asad in 2013
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1932|04}}
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1932|04}}
| birth_place = [[Medina]], [[Saudi Arabia]]
| birth_place = [[Medina]], Saudi Arabia
| death_date = <!-- {{death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} (death date then birth date) -->
| death_date = <!-- {{death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} (death date then birth date) -->
| death_place =
| death_place =
| nationality =
| nationality =
| residence =
| residence =
| other_names =
| other_names =
| known_for =
| known_for =
| citizenship = Saudi Arabian (formerly)<ref name="AJISS">{{cite journal|author=Ovamir Anjum|title=Interview with Talal Asad |journal=American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences |volume=35 |issue=1 |url=https://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/812 |date=21 February 2018|publisher=International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT)|pages=67–70 |doi=10.35632/ajis.v35i1.812 |quote=When I switched my Saudi passport for a Pakistani one it made me a member of the Commonwealth, and that gave me the freedom to move and work as I pleased... But eventually, I think it was when I came back from the Sudan, that I decided to get British Nationality|doi-access=free }}</ref>{{rp|55–60}}<br> Pakistani<ref name="AJISS"/><br> British<ref name="AJISS"/>
| citizenship = Saudi Arabian (formerly)<ref name="AJISS"/><br> Pakistani<ref name="AJISS"/><br> British<ref name="AJISS"/>
| spouse = Tanya Asad{{sfnm |1a1=El-Messiri |1y=1980 |1p=ii |2a1=Watson |2y=2011 |2p=100}}
| spouse = Tanya Asad{{sfn|Watson|2011|p=100}}
| children =
| children =
| parents = {{hlist | [[Muhammad Asad]] | Munira Hussein Al Shammari}}
| father = [[Muhammad Asad]]
| relatives =
| relatives =
| awards = <!--notable national level awards only-->
| awards = <!--notable national level awards only-->
| website =
| website =
| alma_mater = {{unbulleted list | [[University of Edinburgh]] | [[University of Oxford]]}}
| alma_mater = {{unbulleted list | [[University of Edinburgh]] | [[University of Oxford]]}}
| thesis_title = The Kababish{{sfn|Asad|1968}}
| thesis_title = The Kababish{{sfn|Asad|1968}}
| thesis_url =
| thesis_url =
| thesis_year = 1968
| thesis_year = 1968
| school_tradition = {{hlist | [[Postcolonialism]]{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=78}} | [[poststructuralism]]{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=78}}}}
| school_tradition = {{hlist | [[Postcolonialism]]{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=78}} | [[poststructuralism]]{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=78}}}}
| doctoral_advisor = [[E.&nbsp;E. Evans-Pritchard]]
| doctoral_advisor = [[E.&nbsp;E. Evans-Pritchard]]
| academic_advisors =
| academic_advisors =
| influences = {{hlist | [[Michel Foucault]]{{sfnm |1a1=Jakobsen |1y=2015 |1p=114 |2a1=Kessler |2y=2012 |2pp=203–204}} | [[Friedrich Nietzsche]] | [[Ludwig Wittgenstein]]{{sfnm |1a1=Kessler |1y=2012 |1pp=203–204 |2a1=Mirsepassi |2y=2010 |2p=55}}}}
| influences = {{hlist | [[Muhammad Asad]] | [[Michel Foucault]]{{sfnm |1a1=Jakobsen |1y=2015 |1p=114 |2a1=Kessler |2y=2012 |2pp=203–204}} | [[Friedrich Nietzsche]] | [[Ludwig Wittgenstein]]{{sfnm |1a1=Kessler |1y=2012 |1pp=203–204 |2a1=Mirsepassi |2y=2010 |2p=55}} |}}
| era =
| era =
| discipline = [[Anthropology]]
| discipline = [[Anthropology]]
| sub_discipline = {{hlist | [[Anthropology of religion]] | [[cultural anthropology]] | [[postcolonial studies]]{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=78}}}}
| sub_discipline = {{hlist | [[Anthropology of religion]] | [[cultural anthropology]] | [[postcolonial studies]]{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=78}}}}
| workplaces = {{unbulleted list | [[University of Khartoum]] | [[University of Hull]] | [[The New School|New School for Social Research]]<!-- as it was then known --> | [[Johns Hopkins University]] | [[Graduate Center, CUNY]]}}
| workplaces = {{unbulleted list | [[University of Khartoum]] | [[University of Hull]] | [[The New School|New School for Social Research]]<!-- as it was then known --> | [[Johns Hopkins University]] | [[CUNY Graduate Center]]}}
| doctoral_students = <!--only those with WP articles-->
| doctoral_students = <!--only those with WP articles-->
| main_interests =
| notable_students = [[Saba Mahmood]]{{sfn|Jakobsen|2015|p=118}}
| notable_works = ''Formations of the Secular'' (2003)
| main_interests =
| notable_ideas =
| notable_works = ''Formations of the Secular'' (2003)
| influenced = {{hlist | [[Saba Mahmood]]{{sfnm |1a1=Mozumder |1y=2011 |1p=7 |2a1=Uğurlu |2y=2017 |2p=5}} | [[Tomoko Masuzawa]]{{sfn|Mozumder|2011|p=7}}}}
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| influenced = {{hlist | [[Saba Mahmood]]{{sfnm |1a1=Mozumder |1y=2011 |1p=7 |2a1=Uğurlu |2y=2017 |2p=5}} | [[Tomoko Masuzawa]] {{sfn|Mozumder|2011|p=7}}}}
| signature =
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}}
{{Anthropology of religion|Theorists}}
{{Anthropology of religion|Theorists}}
'''Talal Asad''' (born 1932) is a Saudi-born British [[cultural anthropologist]] at the [[Graduate Center, CUNY|Graduate Center]] of the [[City University of New York]].{{sfn|Watson|2011|p=87}} Asad has made important theoretical contributions to [[postcolonialism]], [[Christianity]], [[Islam]], and [[ritual]] studies and has recently called for, and initiated, an [[anthropology]] of [[secularism]]. Using a genealogical method developed by [[Friedrich Nietzsche]] and made prominent by [[Michel Foucault]], Asad "complicates terms of comparison that many anthropologists, theologians, philosophers, and political scientists receive as the unexamined background of thinking, judgment, and action as such. By doing so, he creates clearings, opening new possibilities for communication, connection, and creative invention where opposition or studied indifference prevailed".{{sfn|Connolly|2006|p=75}}
'''Talal Asad''' (born 1932) is a Saudi-born cultural anthropologist who is currently Distinguished Professor Emeritus of [[Anthropology]] and Middle Eastern Studies at the [[Graduate Center of the City University of New York]]. His prolific body of work mainly focuses on religiosity, Middle Eastern studies, [[postcolonialism]], and notions of power, law and discipline. He is also known for his writing calling for an anthropology of [[secularism]].


His work has had a significant influence beyond his home discipline of anthropology. As Donovan Schaefer writes:<blockquote>The gravitational field of Asad’s influence has emanated far from his home discipline and reshaped the landscape of other humanistic disciplines around him.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Schaefer |first=Donovan |date=2020 |title=Talal Asad's Challenge to Religious Studies |journal=Religion and Society |volume=11 |issue=1 |pages=20–23 |doi=10.3167/arrs.2020.110102|doi-access=free }}</ref></blockquote>
His long-term research concerns the transformation of religious law (''[[sharia]]'') in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Egypt with special reference to arguments about what constitutes secular and progressive reform.<ref>{{cite web|title=Talal Asad|url=http://www.gc.cuny.edu/Page-Elements/Academics-Research-Centers-Initiatives/Doctoral-Programs/Anthropology/Faculty-Listing/Talal-Asad|location=New York|publisher=Graduate Center, CUNY|accessdate=11 July 2014}}</ref>


==Biography==
==Biography==
Talal Asad was born in April 1932 in [[Medina, Saudi Arabia]]. His parents are [[Muhammad Asad]], an Austrian diplomat and writer who converted from [[Judaism]] to [[Islam]] in his twenties, and Munira Hussein Al Shammari, a Saudi Arabian Muslim. Asad was born in Saudi Arabia but when he was eight months old his family moved to [[British India]], where his father was part of the [[Pakistan Movement]]. His parents divorced shortly before his father's third marriage.<ref>Chaghatai, M. Ikram, ed. (2006). Muhammad Asad: Europe's Gift to Islam.</ref> Talal was raised in Pakistan, and attended a Christian-run missionary boarding school.<ref>Eilts, John (2006). "Talal Asad". Stanford Presidential Lectures in the Humanities and Arts. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
Asad was born in April 1932{{sfn|Windhager|2006|p=224}} in [[Medina]],<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--Jp_AQXeig|title=5 . Talal Al Asad|last=Asad|first=Talal|date=16 July 2013|website=YouTube|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=8 December 2019}}</ref> [[Saudi Arabia]], to the [[Austria]]n diplomat, writer, and reformer [[Muhammad Asad]], a Jew who converted to Islam in his mid-20s, and a Saudi Arabian Muslim mother, Munira Hussein Al Shammari (died 1978).{{sfn|Chaghatai|2006|p=339}} When Talal was just eight months old, his parents moved to [[British India]], where his father would play a pivotal role in the [[Pakistan Movement]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.questia.com/library/journal/1G1-459507048/the-making-of-a-free-thinker-of-islam-part-i-muhammad|title=The Making of a Free Thinker of Islam (Part I) Muhammad Asad: The Pakistan Years|first=Muzaffar|last=Iqbal|accessdate=7 May 2020|date=2016|work=Islamic Sciences. Summer 2016, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p3-24. 22p.|quote=Asad, then thirty-two, arrived in Karachi with his third wife, (3) Munira bint Husayn al-Shammari (ca. 1915-1978)... and their eight-month-old son, Talal.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mischief-films.com/medialibrary/film_road_to_mecca/A_Road_to_Mekka_Presskit_en.pdf|title=A Road to Mecca: The Journey of Muhammad Asad|accessdate=7 May 2020|date=2008|first=Georg|last=Misch|work=Mischief Films}}</ref> Following Pakistan's independence in 1947, his father joined the Pakistani government, serving the country in various administrative and diplomatic posts.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/546858-austrian-embassy-celebrates-national-day|title=Austrian embassy celebrates national day|work=The News|date=27 October 2019|accessdate=7 May 2020|first=Ishrat|last=Hyatt|quote=He later served at several administrative and diplomatic positions and as Pakistan’s envoy to the United Nations.}}</ref><ref name="Iqbal">{{cite web|url=http://www.allamaiqbal.com/publications/journals/review/aproct09/9.htm|title=Muhammad Asad – the first citizen of Pakistan|work=[[Iqbal Academy Pakistan]]|accessdate=7 May 2020|first=M. Ikram|last=Chaghatai}}</ref> Talal was raised in [[Pakistan]],{{sfn|Mirsepassi|2010|p=55}}<ref name="KuninMiles-Watson2006">{{cite book|author1=Seth Daniel Kunin|author2=Jonathan Miles-Watson|title=Theories of Religion: A Reader|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5RzXqjgtjA0C&pg=PA178|year=2006|publisher=Rutgers University Press|isbn=978-0-8135-3965-2|pages=178}}</ref> and attended a Christian-run missionary boarding school.<ref name="Stanford">{{cite web|url=https://prelectur.stanford.edu/lecturers/asad/|title=Talal Asad|work=Stanford Presidential Lectures in the Humanities and Arts|accessdate=7 May 2020|date=2006|first=John|last=Eilts}}</ref><ref name="YT">{{YouTube|kfAGnxKfwOg|Conversations with History - Talal Asad}}</ref> He is an alumnus of the [[St. Anthony High School, Lahore|St. Anthony High School]] in Lahore.<ref name="AJISS">{{cite book|author=Ovamir Anjum|title=American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences 35:1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DEBNDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA55|date=21 February 2018|publisher=International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT)|pages=67–70|id=GGKEY:K67P7GX8KKT|quote=When I switched my Saudi passport for a Pakistani one it made me a member of the Commonwealth, and that gave me the freedom to move and work as I pleased... But eventually, I think it was when I came back from the Sudan, that I decided to get British Nationality}}</ref> His parents divorced shortly before his father's third marriage.<ref name="Iqbal"/>
</ref> He is an alumnus of the [[St. Anthony's High School, Lahore|St. Anthony High School]] in Lahore.<ref name="AJISS"/> Asad moved to the United Kingdom when he was 18 to attend university and studied architecture for two years before discovering anthropology, about which he has said “it was fun, but I was not terribly suited.”{{sfn|Watson|2011}}


Asad received his undergraduate degree in anthropology from the [[University of Edinburgh]] in 1959.{{sfn|Watson|2011}} He continued to train as a [[cultural anthropologist]], receiving both a [[Bachelor of Letters]] and [[PhD]] from the [[University of Oxford]], which he completed in 1968. Asad’s mentor while at Oxford was notable social anthropologist [[E.E. Evans-Pritchard]], who Asad has since cited in many of his works.{{sfn|Watson|2011}} While attending the University of Edinburgh, he met Tanya Baker, a fellow anthropologist. The two married in 1960, and later both completed their doctorate research at Oxford.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Konopinski |first1=Natalie |title=Tanya Asad |journal=Anthropology News |date=13 November 2020 |url=https://www.anthropology-news.org/articles/tanya-asad/ }}</ref>
Asad went to the United Kingdom for higher education aged 18, initially to study architecture per his father's wishes but later switching to anthropology.<ref name="Stanford"/><ref name="YT"/> He traveled on a Saudi Arabian passport, as Pakistan did not have [[Pakistani nationality law|naturalized citizenship]] laws in place yet; later on, he received a Pakistani passport which enabled him to live and work freely in the UK as a [[Commonwealth citizen]].<ref name="AJISS"/> He graduated from the [[University of Edinburgh]] with an undergraduate degree in 1959 and from the [[University of Oxford]] with a [[Bachelor of Letters]] degree and, in 1968, a [[Doctor of Philosophy]] degree.{{sfn|Watson|2011|pp=87–88}} He worked at the [[University of Khartoum]] and, thereafter upon returning in the early 1970s (following which he also acquired British nationality),<ref name="AJISS"/> at the [[University of Hull]] before moving to the United States in 1989.{{sfn|Watson|2011|p=87}} He then served as professor of [[anthropology]] at the [[The New School|New School for Social Research]] and then [[Johns Hopkins University]].{{sfn|Watson|2011|p=87}} He later became distinguished professor of anthropology at the [[Graduate Center, CUNY|Graduate Center]] of the [[City University of New York]].{{sfn|Watson|2011|p=87}}


After his doctoral studies, Asad completed fieldwork in Northern Sudan on the political structures of the [[Kababish]], a nomadic group that formed under British colonial rule. He published ''The Kababish Arabs: Power, Authority, and Consent in a Nomadic Tribe'' in 1970. Asad became increasingly interested in religiosity, power, and [[Orientalism]] throughout his studies. In the late 1960s, he formed a reading group that focused on material written in the [[Middle East]]. He recalls being struck by the bias and “theoretical poverty” of Orientalist writing, the assumptions taken for granted, and the questions that were not answered.{{sfn|Watson|2011}}
==Critical thematics==

[[William E. Connolly]] attempts to summarize Asad's theoretical contributions on [[secularism]] as follows:{{sfn|Connolly|2006|pp=75–76}}
Throughout his long and prolific career, Asad has been greatly influenced by a broad spectrum of scholars, including notable figures such as [[Karl Marx]], [[E. E. Evans-Pritchard|E.E. Evans-Pritchard]], [[R. G. Collingwood|R.G. Collingwood]], [[Ludwig Wittgenstein]], and [[Michel Foucault]]. He has also cited the invaluable influence of contemporaries and colleagues such as [[John Milbank]], [[Stanley Hauerwas]], [[Edward Said]], [[Alasdair MacIntyre]], and [[Judith Butler]], as well as his former students [[Saba Mahmood]] and Charles Hirschkind. This diverse intellectual network has shaped Asad's unique approach to studying society, culture, and power dynamics, leaving a lasting impact on the field of social sciences.{{sfn|Watson|2011}}

==Career==
Asad’s first teaching job was at [[Khartoum University]] in [[Sudan]], where he spent several years as a lecturer in social anthropology.{{sfn|Watson|2011}} He returned to the [[United Kingdom]] in the early 1970s to lecture at [[Hull University]] in [[Hull, England]]. He moved to the United States in 1989, and taught at the [[New School for Social Research]] in New York City and [[Johns Hopkins University]] in [[Baltimore]], before acquiring his current position of Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the [[Graduate Center of the City University of New York]]. Asad has also held visiting professorships at [[Ain Shams University]] in Cairo, [[King Saud University]] in [[Riyadh]], [[University of California at Berkeley]], and Ecole des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris.{{sfn|Watson|2011}}

Asad’s writing portfolio is extensive, and he has been involved in a variety of projects throughout his career. His books include ''Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter'', published in 1973, ''Genealogies of Religion'', published in 1993, ''Formations of the Secular'', published in 2003, and ''On Suicide Bombing'', published in 2007 and written in response to the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]]. In 1983, he was a co-editor on The Sociology of Developing Societies: The Middle East with economic historian [[Roger Owen (historian)|Roger Owen]]. Asad has said that he wasn’t all that interested in this project and that he did it as a favor to a friend.{{sfn|Watson|2011}} In 2007 Asad was part of a symposium at the Townsend Center at [[University of California, Berkeley]], at which he spoke on his paper “Is Critique Secular? Blasphemy, Injury, and Free Speech.”

Since 2023, the [[İbn Haldun Üniversitesi|Ibn Haldun University]] grants the Talal Asad Awards for the best graduate dissertations in sociology.<ref>{{cite web |title=Talal Asad Award - For Best Graduate Dissertation |url=https://soc.ihu.edu.tr/en/talal-asad-award-for-best-graduate-dissertation |website=Ibn Haldun University |access-date=24 December 2023}}</ref>

==Contributions==
Asad’s work generally involves taking an anthropological approach to political history and analysis, specifically with regard to colonial history and religion. Asad identifies himself as an anthropologist but also states that he is critical of allowing disciplines to be defined by particular techniques (such as [[ethnography]] or statistics, for example).{{sfn|Watson|2011}}

He is often critical of progress narratives, believing that “the assumption of social development following a linear path should be problematized.” Another main facet of his work is his public criticism of [[Orientalism]]. He has expressed frustration with Orientalist assumptions, particularly about religion, which he has said comes from his multicultural [[Muslim]] background.{{sfn|Watson|2011}} His father considered Islam to be primarily an intellectual idea, while his mother considered it an “embodied, unreflective way of living.” Asad’s own interest in religion was based in an attempt to engage with theoretical explorations and to make sense of political and personal experiences. He is particularly interested in conceptions of religion as an embodied practice and the role that discipline plays in this practice.{{sfn|Watson|2011}}

In an essay published in 1986, ''The Idea of an Anthropology of Islam'',<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Asad |first1=Talal |title=The Idea of an Anthropology of Islam |journal=Qui Parle |date=2009 |volume=17 |issue=2 |pages=1–30 |doi=10.5250/quiparle.17.2.1 |jstor=20685738 }}</ref> Talal Asad introduces a concept which has since marked a turning point in the study of [[Islam]] – [[discursive tradition]].

Observing the multiplication of anthropological works on ‘Islam’ and ‘Muslims’ in Western anthropology at his time, Asad points at the simultaneous general incapacity to comprehend any of them. Most analyses, Asad notices, conclude on either the theoretical inexistence of [[Islam]] ; the irreducible multiplicity of its forms ; or define it as a total socio-historical structure. While each of these propositions holds some relevance, they remain unsatisfying – if not wrong due to an initial conceptual flaw, which he proposes to discuss, for ‘to conceptualize Islam as the object of an anthropological study is not as simple a matter as some writers would have one suppose.’ The very question to answer indeed, the starting point of any attempt at understanding Islam, is that of its correct defining – a seemingly basic point which nonetheless reveals paradigm-shifting when put into practice.

Asad’s intervention on Islam is nothing less than a critique of established anthropology as an ethnocentric, irreflexive and in that still much colonial discipline, which paradigm and methods are to be challenged and revised in order for it to properly engage with human forms existing outside of its cultural cradle. He there specifically challenges two of the main anthropologists of religion, [[Clifford Geertz]] and [[Ernest Gellner]], who, to him, impose on Islam a Western modern idea of religion, itself the product of a history of progressive separation of the latter from ‘the spheres of real power and reason such as politics, law, and science’. Asad argues for the importance of the historicization of both observer’s positions and analytical categories and their insertion within a certain [[power-knowledge]] moment and configuration, a theoretical approach he draws from [[Michel Foucault|Foucault]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Fadil |first1=Nadia |title=De la religion aux traditions: Quelques réflexions sur l'œuvre de Talal Asad |journal=[[Archives de sciences sociales des religions]] |date=December 2017 |issue=180 |pages=99–116 |doi=10.4000/assr.29722 |url=https://journals.openedition.org/assr/29722 }}</ref> When it comes to understanding [[Islam]], this implies the adoption of an internal perspective, ‘as Muslims do’, that is, ‘from the concept of a discursive tradition that includes and relates itself to the founding texts of the Qur'an and the Hadith.’

Asad defines tradition as a set of prescriptive discourses, taught and transmitted, that draw their legitimacy, power and meaning from history. They thereby found social cohesion through shared practices articulating the past, present and future of the group i.e Muslims. Asad’s discursive tradition, while pursuing the decentering project engaged by decolonial thinkers such as [[Edward Said]], attempts at complexifying the dichotomy that had been constituted by scholars of Islam between Great and little traditions. While the first one was considered as followed by the elite, text-based and urban – and thus orthodox, the latter characterized the diversity of local practices of rural communities and, in opposition, was understood as heterodox. Yet, for Asad, there is no such thing as a clear distinction between texts and practices of Islam. On the contrary, texts, which do not have an agency by themselves, are practiced, that is read, discussed, made sense of and embodied by believers – and, this, within a given social structure, that is power-knowledge configuration. The relationship between Muslims and the texts is what makes Islam, Asad argues, making of orthodoxy ‘not just a body of opinion but a relationship of power’. This allows him to introduce a political economy perspective in the analysis of Islam, which, dismissed by Geertz and Gellner’s focus on dramatization, explains the diversity of its forms in different contexts.

Asad’s discursive tradition concept has been fundamental for a number of later Islam scholars,<ref>{{cite book |doi=10.4324/9781003244912-4 |chapter=Second Thoughts About the Anthropology of Islam, or How to Make Sense of Grand Schemes in Everyday Life |title=Research in the Islamic Context |date=2022 |last1=Schielke |first1=Samuli |pages=42–68 |isbn=978-1-00-324491-2 |url=http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/32233 }}</ref> although diversely interpreted and prolonged, as noted by [[Ovamir Anjum]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Anjum |first1=Ovamir |title=Islam as a Discursive Tradition: Talal Asad and His Interlocutors |journal=Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East |date=2007 |volume=27 |issue=3 |pages=656–672 |doi=10.1215/1089201x-2007-041 |s2cid=144048768 |id={{Project MUSE|224569}} }}</ref> He, for instance, considers that [[Lukens-Bull]]<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lukens-Bull |first1=Ronald A. |title=Between Text and Practice: Considerations in the Anthropological Study of Islam |journal=Marburg Journal of Religion |date=2015 |volume=4 |issue=2 |doi=10.17192/mjr.1999.4.3763}}</ref> misunderstands Asad when he talks of an orthodox Islam as based on the Qu’ran and Hadiths. He nonetheless considers that such a confusion reveals the limits of Asad’s proposition, which does not explain the articulation between local and global orthodoxies. Anjum thus argues for an enriching of the discursive tradition approach with [[world-system]] analyses applied to Islam.

Following the 2013 [[coup d’état]] in Egypt, Asad wrote an essay, "Thinking About Tradition, Religion, and Politics in Egypt Today",<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Asad |first1=Talal |title=Thinking About Tradition, Religion, and Politics in Egypt Today |journal=Critical Inquiry |date=2015 |volume=42 |issue=1 |pages=166–214 |doi=10.1086/683002 |s2cid=146188908 |url=https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/politica/article/view/2175-7984.2017v16n36p347}}</ref> in which he engages with [[Hannah Arendt]]’s notions of revolution and tradition.<ref name="CUNY 2017">{{cite thesis |last1=Uğurlu |first1=Ali |title=Is There a Secular Tradition? On Treason, Government, and Truth |date=2 June 2017 |url=https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/2098/ }}</ref> Asad argues that the founding of a political tradition is marked by the necessity of violence, and both revolutions and coups use the narrative of necessary violence towards saving and securing the posterity of the nation. The difference, Arendt and Asad both agree on, is that a revolution involves a vision of beginning anew by founding a new tradition, a new system, whereas a coup is meant to replace individuals in power, therefore conserving a living tradition.<ref name="CUNY 2017"/> This is just one of many notable essays Asad has written that deal with concepts of power, discipline, and law.

[[William E. Connolly]] attempts to summarize Asad's theoretical contributions on [[secularism]] as follows:{{sfn|Connolly|2005|pp=75–76}}
# Secularism is not merely the division between public and private realms that allows religious diversity to flourish in the latter. It can itself be a carrier of harsh exclusions. And it secretes a new definition of "religion" that conceals some of its most problematic practices from itself.
# Secularism is not merely the division between public and private realms that allows religious diversity to flourish in the latter. It can itself be a carrier of harsh exclusions. And it secretes a new definition of "religion" that conceals some of its most problematic practices from itself.
# In creating its characteristic division between secular public space and religious private space, European secularism sought to shuffle ritual and discipline into the private realm. In doing so, however, it loses touch with the ways in which embodied practices of conduct help to constitute culture, including European culture.
# In creating its characteristic division between secular public space and religious private space, European secularism sought to interchange ritual and discipline into the private realm. In doing so, however, it loses touch with how embodied practices of conduct help to constitute culture, including European culture.
# The constitution of modern Europe, as a continent and a secular civilization, makes it incumbent to treat Muslims in its midst on the one hand as abstract citizens and on the other as a distinctive minority either to be tolerated (the liberal orientation) or restricted (the national orientation), depending on the politics of the day.
# The constitution of modern Europe, as a continent and a secular civilization, makes it incumbent to treat Muslims in its midst on the one hand as abstract citizens and on the other as a distinctive minority to be either tolerated (the liberal orientation) or restricted (the national orientation), depending on the politics of the day.
# European, modern, secular constitutions of Islam, in cumulative effect, converge upon a series of simple contrasts between themselves and Islamic practices. These terms of contrast falsify the deep grammar of European secularism and contribute to the culture wars some bearers of these very definitions seek to ameliorate.
# European, modern, secular constitutions of Islam, in cumulative effect, converge upon a series of simple contrasts between themselves and Islamic practices. These terms of contrast falsify the deep grammar of European secularism and contribute to the culture wars that some bearers of these very definitions seek to ameliorate.


==Notable works==
==''Formations of the Secular''==
===''Genealogies of Religion''===
''Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity'' is both an original work and a reworking of previous essays and papers by Asad.{{sfn|Asad|2003}} In ''Formations of the Secular'', Asad examines what he views as the curious character of modern European and American societies and their notion of [[secularism]].
''Genealogies of Religion'' was published in 1993. The intention of this book is to critically examine the cultural [[hegemony]] of the West, exploring how Western concepts and religious practices have shaped the way history is written. The book deals with a variety of historical topics ranging from medieval European rites to the sermons of contemporary Arab [[theologians]]. What links them all together, according to Asad, is the assumption that Western history has the greatest importance in the modern world and that explorations of Western history should be the main concern of historians and anthropologists.<ref name="jhup 1993">Talal Asad, “Introduction” in ''Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam''. Pages 1-24. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993.</ref>


The book begins by sketching the emergence of religion as a modern historical object in the first two chapters. Following this, Asad discusses two elements of [[medieval]] [[Christianity]] that are no longer generally accepted by modern religion, those being the productive role of physical pain and the virtue of [[self-abasement]]. While he is not arguing for these practices, he is encouraging readers to think critically about how and why [[modernism]] and secular morality position these as archaic “uncivilized” conditions.<ref name="jhup 1993"/> Asad then addresses aspects of “asymmetry” between western and non-western histories, the largest of these being the fact that Western history is considered the “norm” in that non-Westerners feel the need to study Western history, but this does not go both ways. These “asymmetrical desires and indifferences”, Asad argues, have historically constructed opposition between West and non-West.<ref name="jhup 1993"/> The final two chapters of the books were written at the height of the Rushdie affair in the late 1980s and address angry responses to religious intolerance in the name of liberalism.
Secularism, often viewed as a neutral or flat space that forbids religious opinion or interference in political questions, is found to be somewhat curious to Asad. Specifically, Asad's experiences with the response to the [[September 11, 2001, attacks]] from the point of view of a Muslim in United States exposed him to "explosions of intolerance" that seemed to him "entirely compatible with secularism in a highly modern society".{{sfn|Asad|2003|p=7}} However, rather than simply letting such a coincidence pass, Asad continues by stating that such behaviors are "intertwined" with secularism in a "modern society".{{sfn|Asad|2003|p=7}}


===''Formations of the Secular''===
This leads Asad's deployment of the genealogical method in order to understand why a country like the United States denominates itself as secular despite the distinctly religious [[Manichaeism|Manichaean]] tones&nbsp;– "good" and "evil"&nbsp;– often found within the historical record of the United States.{{sfn|Asad|2003|p=7}} He further notes that despite the nominally secular character of the United States, "repressive measures have been directed at real and imagined secular opponents."{{sfn|Asad|2003|p=7}}
Asad published ''Formations of the Secular'' in 2003. The central idea of the book is creating anthropology of the [[secular]] and what that would entail. This is done through first defining and deconstructing secularism and some of its various parts. Asad’s definition posits “secular” as an [[epistemic]] category, whereas “secularism” refers to a [[political doctrine]].<ref name="stanford 2003">Talal Asad, “Introduction: Thinking about Secularism” in Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity. 1-17. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2003.</ref> The intention of this definition is to urge the reader to understand secular and secularism as more than the absence of [[religiosity]], but rather a mode of society that has its own forms of [[cultural mediation]]. Secularism, as theorized by Asad, is also deeply rooted in narratives of [[modernity]] and progress that formed out of the [[European Enlightenment]], meaning that it is not as “tolerant” and “neutral” as it is widely considered to be.<ref name="stanford 2003"/> On this, Asad writes “A secular state does not guarantee toleration; it puts into play different structures of ambition and fear. The law never seeks to eliminate violence since its object is always to regulate violence.”<ref name="stanford 2003"/>


After giving a short genealogy of the concept of “the secular”, Asad discusses [[Agency (sociology)|agency]], pain, and cruelty, how they relate to [[Embodied cognition|embodiment]], and how they are conceptualized in secular society. From here, he goes into an exploration of different ways in which “the human” or the individual is conceptualized and how this informs different understandings of human rights - establishing “human rights” as having a subjective definition rather than being an objective set of rules.<ref name="stanford 2003"/> Later chapters explore notions and assumptions around “religious minorities” in Europe, and a discussion of whether [[nationalism]] is essentially secular or religious in nature. The final few chapters explore transformations in religious authority, law, and ethics in colonial Egypt in order to illuminate aspects of secularization not usually attended to.
These events, as well as other questions, lead Asad to what might be termed the thesis of the book:


The concluding thought of ''Formations of the Secular'' is the question of what anthropology can contribute to the clarification of questions about secularism. Asad does not determine a clear answer to this question, but encourages exploring secularism “through its shadows” and advises that anthropology of secularism should start asking how “different sensibilities, attitudes, assumptions, and behaviors come together to either support or undermine the doctrine of secularism?”<ref name="stanford 2003"/>
<blockquote>The secular, I argue, is neither continuous with the religious that supposedly preceded it (that is, it is not the latest phase of a sacred origin) nor a simple break from it (that is, it is not the opposite, an essence that excludes the sacred). I take the secular to be a concept that brings together certain behaviors, knowledges, and sensibilities in modern life.{{sfn|Asad|2003|p=25}}</blockquote>


===''On Suicide Bombing''===
Building on that notion, Asad is also critical of the more common concept of secularism, which he views as having no distinct features that demarcate it from other prior forms of secularism found elsewhere in the world. Instead he favors another approach to viewing modern secularism: "In my view the secular is neither singular in origin nor stable in its historical identity, although it works through a series of particular oppositions."{{sfn|Asad|2003|p=24}}
In response to the [[September 11 attacks]] and the rise in [[anti-Islamic sentiment]] that followed, Asad published ''On Suicide Bombing'' in 2007. This book is intended to confront questions about political violence that are central to our modern society and to deconstruct western notions of Islamic terrorism. The central question of the book is not to ask why someone would become a [[suicide bomber]], but instead to think critically about why suicide bombing generates such horror.{{sfn|Asad|2007}}


Asad offers several suggestions or potential explanations as to why there is a particular sense of horror when confronted with suicide bombing:
With that said, Asad's goal for the book is to understand how a more general pre-secularism mutates into the more familiar "novel" form of secularism present within Euro-American societies&nbsp;– Asad makes clear his interest in this specific "novel" variant.{{sfn|Asad|2003|pp=1–2}}
*Suicide bombing represents the epitome of sudden disorder, creating a shocking, very public upsetting of public life. It is a direct violation of the notion of civilian innocence - which, as Asad points out, also happens as a result of U.S. state violence but is “softened” through patriotic rhetoric. This violation is seen as particularly horrifying and unforgivable.{{sfn|Asad|2007}}
*Suicide bombing is an act of murder that removes the perpetrator beyond the reach of justice. Modern, liberal society places a strong emphasis on bringing criminals to justice, which is not an option in cases of suicide attacks. Crime and punishment become impossible to separate, meaning there is no way to achieve closure for the attack.{{sfn|Asad|2007}}
*Asad describes in this book the way that modern society is held together by a series of tensions, such as the tension between individual self-determination and collective obedience to the law, between reverence for human life and its justified ending, and between the promise of immortality through political community and the inexorability of death and decay in individual life. These tensions allow the state to act as sovereign representative, guardian, and nurturer of the social body, but this starts to collapse when the state fails to protect the social body from a suicide attack.{{sfn|Asad|2007}}
*A suicide bombing forces witnesses to confront death and the thought that “the meaning of life is only death and that death itself has no meaning.”{{sfn|Asad|2007}} When there is nothing to understand about death, no way to redeem it through a comforting story, the death feels particularly tragic and horrifying.


Asad’s hope in writing this book is not to defend suicide bombing, but instead to go beyond some of the commonly held positions surrounding it. In particular, he is critical of the denunciation of religious violence as the very opposite of legitimate, "justified" political violence that the U.S. engages in. His goal is to communicate that if there is no such thing as "justified terrorism", there is no such thing as "justified war" and therefore to turn the readers' attention to a critical examination of killing, of dying, and of letting live and letting die in modern global politics.{{sfn|Asad|2007}}
==Select bibliography==

* ''The Kababish Arabs: Power, Authority, and Consent in a Nomadic Tribe''. Praeger Publishers, 1970. {{ISBN|0-900966-21-1}}
==Publications==
* "Market Model, Class Structure, and Consent: A Reconsideration of Swat Political Organization." ''Man'' 7(1) (1972), pp.&nbsp;74–89.
===Books===
* Editor, ''Anthropology & the Colonial Encounter''. Ithaca Press, 1973. {{ISBN|0-903729-00-8}}
*''The Kababish Arabs: Power, Authority, and Consent in a Nomadic Tribe'' (1970).
* ''The Idea of an Anthropology of Islam''. Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, 1986. {{ISBN|978-9991289526}}
* ''Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam''. The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993. {{ISBN|0-8018-4632-3}}
*''Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam'' (1993).
* ''Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity''. Stanford University Press, 2003. {{ISBN|0-8047-4768-7}}
*''Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity'' (2003).
* ''On Suicide Bombing''. Columbia University Press, 2007. {{ISBN|978-0-231-14152-9}}
*''On Suicide Bombing'' (2007).
*''Is critique secular?: blasphemy, injury, and free speech'' (with [[Wendy Brown]], [[Judith Butler]] and [[Saba Mahmood]]) (2013).
*''Secular Translations: Nation-State, Modern Self, and Calculative Reason''. Columbia University Press, 2018. {{ISBN|9780231189873}}
*''Secular Translations. Nation-State, Modern Self, and Calculative Reason'' (2018).
*''Tradition critique. Après la rencontre coloniale'' (2023).

===Book chapters===
*Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter. In Gerrit Huizer and Bruce Mannheim (eds.), ''The Politics of Anthropology From Colonialism and Sexism Toward a View from Below'' (1979).
*Comments on Conversion. In [[Peter van der Veer]] (ed.), ''Conversion to Modernities'' (1996).
*Where Are the Margins of the State?. In [[Veena Das]] and Deborah Poole (eds.), ''Anthropology in the Margins of the State'' (2007).
*Thinking about religion, belief, and politics. In [[Robert Orsi|Robert A. Orsi]] (ed.), ''The Cambridge Companion to Religious Studies'' (2011).
*Two European Images of Non-European Rule. In [[Saul Dubow]] (ed.), ''The Rise and Fall of Modern Empires. Volume II: Colonial Knowledges'' (2013).


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal|Biography|Religion}}
{{Portal|Biography|Religion}}
* [[Aziz al-Azmeh]]
*[[Aziz al-Azmeh]]
* [[William T. Cavanaugh]]
*[[William T. Cavanaugh]]
* [[Alasdair MacIntyre]]
*[[Alasdair MacIntyre]]
* [[Saba Mahmood]]
*[[Saba Mahmood]]
* [[Charles Taylor (philosopher)]]
*[[Charles Taylor (philosopher)]]


==References==
==References==
Line 97: Line 141:


===Works cited===
===Works cited===
*{{cite journal |last1=Anjum |first1=Ovamir |title=Interview with Talal Asad |journal=American Journal of Islam and Society |date=2018 |volume=35 |issue=1 |pages=55–90 |doi=10.35632/ajis.v35i1.812 |doi-access=free}}
{{refbegin|35em|indent=yes}}
* {{cite thesis |last=Asad |first=Talal |year=1968 |title=The Kababish |publisher=University of Oxford |oclc=46544933 |type=PhD}}
: {{cite thesis
* Asad, Talal. 1993. “Introduction” in ''Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam''. '''1'''-24. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 
|last=Asad
* Asad, Talal. 2003. “Introduction: Thinking about Secularism” in ''Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity''. '''1'''-17. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
|first=Talal
* {{cite journal |last1=Asad |first1=Talal |title=On Suicide Bombing |journal=The Arab Studies Journal |date=2007 |volume=15/16 |issue=2/1 |pages=123–130 |jstor=27934028}}
|year=1968
* Chaghatai, M. Ikram. "Muhammad Asad – the first citizen of Pakistan". Iqbal Academy Pakistan. 
|title=The Kababish
* {{cite book |last=Connolly |first=William E. |date=2005 |title=Pluralism |location=Durham, North Carolina |publisher=Duke University Press |isbn=9780822335672}}
|degree=DPhil
* Eilts, John. 2006. "Talal Asad". ''Stanford Presidential Lectures in the Humanities and Arts''. Accessed 7 May 2020.
|location=Oxford
* {{cite book |last=Jakobsen |first=Jonas |chapter=8 Contextualising Religious Pain: Saba Mahmood, Axel Honneth, and the Danish Cartoons. |title=Recognition and Freedom |publisher=Brill |year=2015 |pages=169–192}}
|publisher=University of Oxford
* {{cite book |last=Kessler |first=Gary E. |date=2012 |title=Fifty Key Thinkers on Religion |location=Abingdon, England |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-203-80747-7}}
|oclc=46544933
* {{cite journal |last1=Konopinski |first1=Natalie |title=Tanya Asad |journal=Anthropology News |date=13 November 2020 |url=https://www.anthropology-news.org/articles/tanya-asad/}}
|ref=harv
* {{cite magazine |lang=fr |first=Jean-Michel |last=Landry |title=Les territoires de Talal Asad : Pouvoir, sécularité, modernité |magazine=L'Homme |date=2016 |issn=0439-4216 |url=https://www.cairn.info/revue-l-homme-2016-1-page-77.htm |page=77}}
}}
* {{cite book |last=Mirsepassi |first=Ali |year=2010 | isbn=9780521745901| title=Political Islam, Iran, and the Enlightenment: Philosophies of Hope and Despair | publisher=Cambridge University Press }}
: {{cite book
* {{cite thesis
|last=Asad
|first=Talal
|author-mask={{long dash}}
|year=2003
|title=Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity
|location=Stanford, California
|publisher=Stanford University Press
|isbn=978-0-8047-4768-4
|ref=harv
}}
: {{cite book
|year=2006
|editor-last=Chaghatai
|editor-first=M. Ikram
|title=Muhammad Asad: Europe's Gift to Islam
|volume=1
|ref=harv
}}
: {{cite book
|last=Connolly
|first=William E.
|author-link=William E. Connolly
|year=2006
|chapter=Europe: A Powerful Tradition
|editor1-last=Scott
|editor1-first=David
|editor2-last=Hirschkind
|editor2-first=Charles
|title=Powers of the Secular Modern: Talal Asad and His Interlocutors
|url=https://archive.org/details/powerssecularmod00scot
|url-access=limited
|location=Stanford, California
|publisher=Stanford University Press
|pages=[https://archive.org/details/powerssecularmod00scot/page/n85 75]–92
|isbn=978-0-8047-5266-4
|ref=harv
}}
: {{cite thesis
|last=El-Messiri
|first=Sawsan
|year=1980
|title=Class and Community in an Egyptian Textile Town
|url=https://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:4671
|degree=PhD
|location=Hull, England
|publisher=University of Hull
|access-date=1 November 2018
|ref=harv
}}
: {{cite journal
|last=Jakobsen
|first=Jonas
|year=2015
|title=Secularism, Liberal Democracy and Islam in Europe: A Habermasian Critique of Talal Asad
|journal=Contrastes
|volume=20
|issue=3
|pages=113–125
|doi=10.24310/Contrastescontrastes.v20i3.2419
|doi-access=free
|issn=1136-9922
|ref=harv
}}
: {{cite book
|last=Kessler
|first=Gary E.
|year=2012
|title=Fifty Key Thinkers on Religion
|location=Abingdon, England
|publisher=Routledge
|isbn=978-0-415-49260-7
|ref=harv
}}
: {{cite journal
|last=Landry
|first=Jean-Michel
|year=2016
|title=Les territoires de Talal Asad&nbsp;: Pouvoir, sécularité, modernité
|journal=L'Homme
|language=fr
|issue=217
|pages=77–89
|doi=10.4000/lhomme.28860
|doi-access=free
|isbn=978-2-7132-2523-9
|issn=0439-4216
|jstor=24700222
|ref=harv
}}
: {{cite book
|last=Mirsepassi
|first=Ali
|year=2010
|title=Democracy in Modern Iran: Islam, Culture, and Political Change
|location=New York
|publisher=New York University Press
|isbn=978-0-8147-5864-9
|ref=harv
}}
: {{cite thesis
|last=Mozumder
|last=Mozumder
|first=Mohammad Golam Nabi
|first=Mohammad Golam Nabi
Line 219: Line 164:
|publisher=University of Pittsburgh
|publisher=University of Pittsburgh
|access-date=1 November 2018
|access-date=1 November 2018
|ref=harv
}}
}}
* Uğurlu, Ali M., 2017. ”Is There a Secular Tradition? On Treason, Government, and Truth.” (Thesis) City University of New York Academic Works.
: {{cite thesis
* {{cite journal |last1=Watson |first1=Janell |title=Modernizing Middle Eastern Studies, Historicizing Religion, Particularizing Human Rights |journal=The Minnesota Review |date=November 2011 |volume=2011 |issue=77 |pages=87–100 |doi=10.1215/00265667-1422589 |s2cid=153512468 |doi-access=free}}
|last=Uğurlu

|first=Ali M.
==Further reading==
|year=2017
*Asad's analysis of his development as an anthropologist through the lens of his life history:
|title=Is There a Secular Tradition? On Treason, Government, and Truth
** {{cite journal |last1=Asad |first1=Talal |last2=Boyarin |first2=Jonathan |last3=Agrama |first3=Hussein Ali |last4=Schaefer |first4=Donovan O. |last5=Abeysekara |first5=Ananda |title=Portrait: Talal Asad |journal=Religion and Society |date=September 2020 |volume=11 |issue=1 |pages=1–29 |doi=10.3167/arrs.2020.110102 |s2cid=242541220 |doi-access=free }}
|url=https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/2098/
*Article exploring "the secular" as conceptualized by both Talal Asad, and the political theorist [[William E. Connolly]]:
|degree=MA
**{{cite news |last1=Hirschkind |first1=Charles |title=Is there a secular body? |url=https://www.abc.net.au/religion/is-there-a-secular-body/10101586 |access-date=6 September 2021 |work=ABC Religion & Ethics |publisher=ABC News (Australia) |date=4 April 2011 |language=en-AU}}
|location=New York
*A discussion of Asad's concepts - "Talal Asad argues that, in tradition, religion is embodied in practices geared to producing particular virtues.":
|publisher=City University of New York
**{{cite journal |last1=Rafudeen |first1=Auwais |title=Practices and Knowledges |journal=Religion & Theology |date=2015 |volume=22 |issue=1–2 |pages=153–178 |doi=10.1163/15743012-02201007}}
|access-date=1 November 2018
|ref=harv
}}
: {{cite magazine
|last=Watson
|first=Janell
|year=2011
|title=Modernizing Middle Eastern Studies, Historicizing Religion, Particularizing Human Rights: An Interview with Talal Asad
|magazine=The Minnesota Review
|issue=77
|location=Durham, North Carolina
|publisher=Duke University Press
|pages=87–100
|doi=10.1215/00265667-1422589
|doi-access=free
|issn=2157-4189
|ref=harv
}}
: {{cite book
|last=Windhager
|first=Günther
|year=2006
|chapter=Vom Kaffeehaus an den saudischen Königshof Leopold Weiss' (später Muhammad Asad) Begegnungen in Wien und Berlin auf seinem Weg zum Islam
|editor-last=Heuer
|editor-first=Gottfried
|title=Utopie & Eros: Der Traum von der Moderne
|language=de
|location=Marburg, Hesse
|publisher=LiteraturWissenschaft.de
|pages=209–228
|isbn=978-3-936134-18-6
|ref=harv
}}
{{refend}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
{{wikiquote}}
* [http://anthropology.commons.gc.cuny.edu/talal-asad/ CUNY Graduate Center Anthropology Faculty Website]
*[http://anthropology.commons.gc.cuny.edu/talal-asad/ CUNY Graduate Center Anthropology Faculty Website]
* {{YouTube|kfAGnxKfwOg|Interview with Asad}}
*{{YouTube|kfAGnxKfwOg|Interview with Asad}}
* [http://asiasociety.org/islam-secularism-and-modern-state "AsiaSource Interview with Talal Asad" by Nermeen Shaikh]
*[http://asiasociety.org/islam-secularism-and-modern-state "AsiaSource Interview with Talal Asad" by Nermeen Shaikh]


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Asad, Talal}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Asad, Talal}}

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Latest revision as of 09:01, 7 November 2024

Talal Asad
Talal Asad in 2013
BornApril 1932 (age 92)
Medina, Saudi Arabia
CitizenshipSaudi Arabian (formerly)[7]: 55–60 
Pakistani[7]
British[7]
SpouseTanya Asad[8]
FatherMuhammad Asad
Academic background
Alma mater
ThesisThe Kababish[1] (1968)
Doctoral advisorE. E. Evans-Pritchard
Influences
Academic work
DisciplineAnthropology
Sub-discipline
School or tradition
Institutions
Notable worksFormations of the Secular (2003)
Influenced

Talal Asad (born 1932) is a Saudi-born cultural anthropologist who is currently Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Anthropology and Middle Eastern Studies at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. His prolific body of work mainly focuses on religiosity, Middle Eastern studies, postcolonialism, and notions of power, law and discipline. He is also known for his writing calling for an anthropology of secularism.

His work has had a significant influence beyond his home discipline of anthropology. As Donovan Schaefer writes:

The gravitational field of Asad’s influence has emanated far from his home discipline and reshaped the landscape of other humanistic disciplines around him.[9]

Biography

[edit]

Talal Asad was born in April 1932 in Medina, Saudi Arabia. His parents are Muhammad Asad, an Austrian diplomat and writer who converted from Judaism to Islam in his twenties, and Munira Hussein Al Shammari, a Saudi Arabian Muslim. Asad was born in Saudi Arabia but when he was eight months old his family moved to British India, where his father was part of the Pakistan Movement. His parents divorced shortly before his father's third marriage.[10] Talal was raised in Pakistan, and attended a Christian-run missionary boarding school.[11] He is an alumnus of the St. Anthony High School in Lahore.[7] Asad moved to the United Kingdom when he was 18 to attend university and studied architecture for two years before discovering anthropology, about which he has said “it was fun, but I was not terribly suited.”[12]

Asad received his undergraduate degree in anthropology from the University of Edinburgh in 1959.[12] He continued to train as a cultural anthropologist, receiving both a Bachelor of Letters and PhD from the University of Oxford, which he completed in 1968. Asad’s mentor while at Oxford was notable social anthropologist E.E. Evans-Pritchard, who Asad has since cited in many of his works.[12] While attending the University of Edinburgh, he met Tanya Baker, a fellow anthropologist. The two married in 1960, and later both completed their doctorate research at Oxford.[13]

After his doctoral studies, Asad completed fieldwork in Northern Sudan on the political structures of the Kababish, a nomadic group that formed under British colonial rule. He published The Kababish Arabs: Power, Authority, and Consent in a Nomadic Tribe in 1970. Asad became increasingly interested in religiosity, power, and Orientalism throughout his studies. In the late 1960s, he formed a reading group that focused on material written in the Middle East. He recalls being struck by the bias and “theoretical poverty” of Orientalist writing, the assumptions taken for granted, and the questions that were not answered.[12]

Throughout his long and prolific career, Asad has been greatly influenced by a broad spectrum of scholars, including notable figures such as Karl Marx, E.E. Evans-Pritchard, R.G. Collingwood, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and Michel Foucault. He has also cited the invaluable influence of contemporaries and colleagues such as John Milbank, Stanley Hauerwas, Edward Said, Alasdair MacIntyre, and Judith Butler, as well as his former students Saba Mahmood and Charles Hirschkind. This diverse intellectual network has shaped Asad's unique approach to studying society, culture, and power dynamics, leaving a lasting impact on the field of social sciences.[12]

Career

[edit]

Asad’s first teaching job was at Khartoum University in Sudan, where he spent several years as a lecturer in social anthropology.[12] He returned to the United Kingdom in the early 1970s to lecture at Hull University in Hull, England. He moved to the United States in 1989, and taught at the New School for Social Research in New York City and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, before acquiring his current position of Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Asad has also held visiting professorships at Ain Shams University in Cairo, King Saud University in Riyadh, University of California at Berkeley, and Ecole des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris.[12]

Asad’s writing portfolio is extensive, and he has been involved in a variety of projects throughout his career. His books include Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter, published in 1973, Genealogies of Religion, published in 1993, Formations of the Secular, published in 2003, and On Suicide Bombing, published in 2007 and written in response to the September 11, 2001 attacks. In 1983, he was a co-editor on The Sociology of Developing Societies: The Middle East with economic historian Roger Owen. Asad has said that he wasn’t all that interested in this project and that he did it as a favor to a friend.[12] In 2007 Asad was part of a symposium at the Townsend Center at University of California, Berkeley, at which he spoke on his paper “Is Critique Secular? Blasphemy, Injury, and Free Speech.”

Since 2023, the Ibn Haldun University grants the Talal Asad Awards for the best graduate dissertations in sociology.[14]

Contributions

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Asad’s work generally involves taking an anthropological approach to political history and analysis, specifically with regard to colonial history and religion. Asad identifies himself as an anthropologist but also states that he is critical of allowing disciplines to be defined by particular techniques (such as ethnography or statistics, for example).[12]

He is often critical of progress narratives, believing that “the assumption of social development following a linear path should be problematized.” Another main facet of his work is his public criticism of Orientalism. He has expressed frustration with Orientalist assumptions, particularly about religion, which he has said comes from his multicultural Muslim background.[12] His father considered Islam to be primarily an intellectual idea, while his mother considered it an “embodied, unreflective way of living.” Asad’s own interest in religion was based in an attempt to engage with theoretical explorations and to make sense of political and personal experiences. He is particularly interested in conceptions of religion as an embodied practice and the role that discipline plays in this practice.[12]

In an essay published in 1986, The Idea of an Anthropology of Islam,[15] Talal Asad introduces a concept which has since marked a turning point in the study of Islamdiscursive tradition.

Observing the multiplication of anthropological works on ‘Islam’ and ‘Muslims’ in Western anthropology at his time, Asad points at the simultaneous general incapacity to comprehend any of them. Most analyses, Asad notices, conclude on either the theoretical inexistence of Islam ; the irreducible multiplicity of its forms ; or define it as a total socio-historical structure. While each of these propositions holds some relevance, they remain unsatisfying – if not wrong due to an initial conceptual flaw, which he proposes to discuss, for ‘to conceptualize Islam as the object of an anthropological study is not as simple a matter as some writers would have one suppose.’ The very question to answer indeed, the starting point of any attempt at understanding Islam, is that of its correct defining – a seemingly basic point which nonetheless reveals paradigm-shifting when put into practice.

Asad’s intervention on Islam is nothing less than a critique of established anthropology as an ethnocentric, irreflexive and in that still much colonial discipline, which paradigm and methods are to be challenged and revised in order for it to properly engage with human forms existing outside of its cultural cradle. He there specifically challenges two of the main anthropologists of religion, Clifford Geertz and Ernest Gellner, who, to him, impose on Islam a Western modern idea of religion, itself the product of a history of progressive separation of the latter from ‘the spheres of real power and reason such as politics, law, and science’. Asad argues for the importance of the historicization of both observer’s positions and analytical categories and their insertion within a certain power-knowledge moment and configuration, a theoretical approach he draws from Foucault.[16] When it comes to understanding Islam, this implies the adoption of an internal perspective, ‘as Muslims do’, that is, ‘from the concept of a discursive tradition that includes and relates itself to the founding texts of the Qur'an and the Hadith.’

Asad defines tradition as a set of prescriptive discourses, taught and transmitted, that draw their legitimacy, power and meaning from history. They thereby found social cohesion through shared practices articulating the past, present and future of the group i.e Muslims. Asad’s discursive tradition, while pursuing the decentering project engaged by decolonial thinkers such as Edward Said, attempts at complexifying the dichotomy that had been constituted by scholars of Islam between Great and little traditions. While the first one was considered as followed by the elite, text-based and urban – and thus orthodox, the latter characterized the diversity of local practices of rural communities and, in opposition, was understood as heterodox. Yet, for Asad, there is no such thing as a clear distinction between texts and practices of Islam. On the contrary, texts, which do not have an agency by themselves, are practiced, that is read, discussed, made sense of and embodied by believers – and, this, within a given social structure, that is power-knowledge configuration. The relationship between Muslims and the texts is what makes Islam, Asad argues, making of orthodoxy ‘not just a body of opinion but a relationship of power’. This allows him to introduce a political economy perspective in the analysis of Islam, which, dismissed by Geertz and Gellner’s focus on dramatization, explains the diversity of its forms in different contexts.

Asad’s discursive tradition concept has been fundamental for a number of later Islam scholars,[17] although diversely interpreted and prolonged, as noted by Ovamir Anjum.[18] He, for instance, considers that Lukens-Bull[19] misunderstands Asad when he talks of an orthodox Islam as based on the Qu’ran and Hadiths. He nonetheless considers that such a confusion reveals the limits of Asad’s proposition, which does not explain the articulation between local and global orthodoxies. Anjum thus argues for an enriching of the discursive tradition approach with world-system analyses applied to Islam.

Following the 2013 coup d’état in Egypt, Asad wrote an essay, "Thinking About Tradition, Religion, and Politics in Egypt Today",[20] in which he engages with Hannah Arendt’s notions of revolution and tradition.[21] Asad argues that the founding of a political tradition is marked by the necessity of violence, and both revolutions and coups use the narrative of necessary violence towards saving and securing the posterity of the nation. The difference, Arendt and Asad both agree on, is that a revolution involves a vision of beginning anew by founding a new tradition, a new system, whereas a coup is meant to replace individuals in power, therefore conserving a living tradition.[21] This is just one of many notable essays Asad has written that deal with concepts of power, discipline, and law.

William E. Connolly attempts to summarize Asad's theoretical contributions on secularism as follows:[22]

  1. Secularism is not merely the division between public and private realms that allows religious diversity to flourish in the latter. It can itself be a carrier of harsh exclusions. And it secretes a new definition of "religion" that conceals some of its most problematic practices from itself.
  2. In creating its characteristic division between secular public space and religious private space, European secularism sought to interchange ritual and discipline into the private realm. In doing so, however, it loses touch with how embodied practices of conduct help to constitute culture, including European culture.
  3. The constitution of modern Europe, as a continent and a secular civilization, makes it incumbent to treat Muslims in its midst on the one hand as abstract citizens and on the other as a distinctive minority to be either tolerated (the liberal orientation) or restricted (the national orientation), depending on the politics of the day.
  4. European, modern, secular constitutions of Islam, in cumulative effect, converge upon a series of simple contrasts between themselves and Islamic practices. These terms of contrast falsify the deep grammar of European secularism and contribute to the culture wars that some bearers of these very definitions seek to ameliorate.

Notable works

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Genealogies of Religion

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Genealogies of Religion was published in 1993. The intention of this book is to critically examine the cultural hegemony of the West, exploring how Western concepts and religious practices have shaped the way history is written. The book deals with a variety of historical topics ranging from medieval European rites to the sermons of contemporary Arab theologians. What links them all together, according to Asad, is the assumption that Western history has the greatest importance in the modern world and that explorations of Western history should be the main concern of historians and anthropologists.[23]

The book begins by sketching the emergence of religion as a modern historical object in the first two chapters. Following this, Asad discusses two elements of medieval Christianity that are no longer generally accepted by modern religion, those being the productive role of physical pain and the virtue of self-abasement. While he is not arguing for these practices, he is encouraging readers to think critically about how and why modernism and secular morality position these as archaic “uncivilized” conditions.[23] Asad then addresses aspects of “asymmetry” between western and non-western histories, the largest of these being the fact that Western history is considered the “norm” in that non-Westerners feel the need to study Western history, but this does not go both ways. These “asymmetrical desires and indifferences”, Asad argues, have historically constructed opposition between West and non-West.[23] The final two chapters of the books were written at the height of the Rushdie affair in the late 1980s and address angry responses to religious intolerance in the name of liberalism.

Formations of the Secular

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Asad published Formations of the Secular in 2003. The central idea of the book is creating anthropology of the secular and what that would entail. This is done through first defining and deconstructing secularism and some of its various parts. Asad’s definition posits “secular” as an epistemic category, whereas “secularism” refers to a political doctrine.[24] The intention of this definition is to urge the reader to understand secular and secularism as more than the absence of religiosity, but rather a mode of society that has its own forms of cultural mediation. Secularism, as theorized by Asad, is also deeply rooted in narratives of modernity and progress that formed out of the European Enlightenment, meaning that it is not as “tolerant” and “neutral” as it is widely considered to be.[24] On this, Asad writes “A secular state does not guarantee toleration; it puts into play different structures of ambition and fear. The law never seeks to eliminate violence since its object is always to regulate violence.”[24]

After giving a short genealogy of the concept of “the secular”, Asad discusses agency, pain, and cruelty, how they relate to embodiment, and how they are conceptualized in secular society. From here, he goes into an exploration of different ways in which “the human” or the individual is conceptualized and how this informs different understandings of human rights - establishing “human rights” as having a subjective definition rather than being an objective set of rules.[24] Later chapters explore notions and assumptions around “religious minorities” in Europe, and a discussion of whether nationalism is essentially secular or religious in nature. The final few chapters explore transformations in religious authority, law, and ethics in colonial Egypt in order to illuminate aspects of secularization not usually attended to.

The concluding thought of Formations of the Secular is the question of what anthropology can contribute to the clarification of questions about secularism. Asad does not determine a clear answer to this question, but encourages exploring secularism “through its shadows” and advises that anthropology of secularism should start asking how “different sensibilities, attitudes, assumptions, and behaviors come together to either support or undermine the doctrine of secularism?”[24]

On Suicide Bombing

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In response to the September 11 attacks and the rise in anti-Islamic sentiment that followed, Asad published On Suicide Bombing in 2007. This book is intended to confront questions about political violence that are central to our modern society and to deconstruct western notions of Islamic terrorism. The central question of the book is not to ask why someone would become a suicide bomber, but instead to think critically about why suicide bombing generates such horror.[25]

Asad offers several suggestions or potential explanations as to why there is a particular sense of horror when confronted with suicide bombing:

  • Suicide bombing represents the epitome of sudden disorder, creating a shocking, very public upsetting of public life. It is a direct violation of the notion of civilian innocence - which, as Asad points out, also happens as a result of U.S. state violence but is “softened” through patriotic rhetoric. This violation is seen as particularly horrifying and unforgivable.[25]
  • Suicide bombing is an act of murder that removes the perpetrator beyond the reach of justice. Modern, liberal society places a strong emphasis on bringing criminals to justice, which is not an option in cases of suicide attacks. Crime and punishment become impossible to separate, meaning there is no way to achieve closure for the attack.[25]
  • Asad describes in this book the way that modern society is held together by a series of tensions, such as the tension between individual self-determination and collective obedience to the law, between reverence for human life and its justified ending, and between the promise of immortality through political community and the inexorability of death and decay in individual life. These tensions allow the state to act as sovereign representative, guardian, and nurturer of the social body, but this starts to collapse when the state fails to protect the social body from a suicide attack.[25]
  • A suicide bombing forces witnesses to confront death and the thought that “the meaning of life is only death and that death itself has no meaning.”[25] When there is nothing to understand about death, no way to redeem it through a comforting story, the death feels particularly tragic and horrifying.

Asad’s hope in writing this book is not to defend suicide bombing, but instead to go beyond some of the commonly held positions surrounding it. In particular, he is critical of the denunciation of religious violence as the very opposite of legitimate, "justified" political violence that the U.S. engages in. His goal is to communicate that if there is no such thing as "justified terrorism", there is no such thing as "justified war" and therefore to turn the readers' attention to a critical examination of killing, of dying, and of letting live and letting die in modern global politics.[25]

Publications

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Books

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  • The Kababish Arabs: Power, Authority, and Consent in a Nomadic Tribe (1970).
  • Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam (1993).
  • Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity (2003).
  • On Suicide Bombing (2007).
  • Is critique secular?: blasphemy, injury, and free speech (with Wendy Brown, Judith Butler and Saba Mahmood) (2013).
  • Secular Translations. Nation-State, Modern Self, and Calculative Reason (2018).
  • Tradition critique. Après la rencontre coloniale (2023).

Book chapters

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  • Anthropology and the Colonial Encounter. In Gerrit Huizer and Bruce Mannheim (eds.), The Politics of Anthropology From Colonialism and Sexism Toward a View from Below (1979).
  • Comments on Conversion. In Peter van der Veer (ed.), Conversion to Modernities (1996).
  • Where Are the Margins of the State?. In Veena Das and Deborah Poole (eds.), Anthropology in the Margins of the State (2007).
  • Thinking about religion, belief, and politics. In Robert A. Orsi (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Religious Studies (2011).
  • Two European Images of Non-European Rule. In Saul Dubow (ed.), The Rise and Fall of Modern Empires. Volume II: Colonial Knowledges (2013).

See also

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References

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Footnotes

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  1. ^ Asad 1968.
  2. ^ Jakobsen 2015, p. 114; Kessler 2012, pp. 203–204.
  3. ^ Kessler 2012, pp. 203–204; Mirsepassi 2010, p. 55.
  4. ^ a b c Landry 2016, p. 78.
  5. ^ Mozumder 2011, p. 7; Uğurlu 2017, p. 5.
  6. ^ Mozumder 2011, p. 7.
  7. ^ a b c d Ovamir Anjum (21 February 2018). "Interview with Talal Asad". American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences. 35 (1). International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT): 67–70. doi:10.35632/ajis.v35i1.812. When I switched my Saudi passport for a Pakistani one it made me a member of the Commonwealth, and that gave me the freedom to move and work as I pleased... But eventually, I think it was when I came back from the Sudan, that I decided to get British Nationality
  8. ^ Watson 2011, p. 100.
  9. ^ Schaefer, Donovan (2020). "Talal Asad's Challenge to Religious Studies". Religion and Society. 11 (1): 20–23. doi:10.3167/arrs.2020.110102.
  10. ^ Chaghatai, M. Ikram, ed. (2006). Muhammad Asad: Europe's Gift to Islam.
  11. ^ Eilts, John (2006). "Talal Asad". Stanford Presidential Lectures in the Humanities and Arts. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Watson 2011.
  13. ^ Konopinski, Natalie (13 November 2020). "Tanya Asad". Anthropology News.
  14. ^ "Talal Asad Award - For Best Graduate Dissertation". Ibn Haldun University. Retrieved 24 December 2023.
  15. ^ Asad, Talal (2009). "The Idea of an Anthropology of Islam". Qui Parle. 17 (2): 1–30. doi:10.5250/quiparle.17.2.1. JSTOR 20685738.
  16. ^ Fadil, Nadia (December 2017). "De la religion aux traditions: Quelques réflexions sur l'œuvre de Talal Asad". Archives de sciences sociales des religions (180): 99–116. doi:10.4000/assr.29722.
  17. ^ Schielke, Samuli (2022). "Second Thoughts About the Anthropology of Islam, or How to Make Sense of Grand Schemes in Everyday Life". Research in the Islamic Context. pp. 42–68. doi:10.4324/9781003244912-4. ISBN 978-1-00-324491-2.
  18. ^ Anjum, Ovamir (2007). "Islam as a Discursive Tradition: Talal Asad and His Interlocutors". Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 27 (3): 656–672. doi:10.1215/1089201x-2007-041. S2CID 144048768. Project MUSE 224569.
  19. ^ Lukens-Bull, Ronald A. (2015). "Between Text and Practice: Considerations in the Anthropological Study of Islam". Marburg Journal of Religion. 4 (2). doi:10.17192/mjr.1999.4.3763.
  20. ^ Asad, Talal (2015). "Thinking About Tradition, Religion, and Politics in Egypt Today". Critical Inquiry. 42 (1): 166–214. doi:10.1086/683002. S2CID 146188908.
  21. ^ a b Uğurlu, Ali (2 June 2017). Is There a Secular Tradition? On Treason, Government, and Truth (Thesis).
  22. ^ Connolly 2005, pp. 75–76.
  23. ^ a b c Talal Asad, “Introduction” in Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam. Pages 1-24. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993.
  24. ^ a b c d e Talal Asad, “Introduction: Thinking about Secularism” in Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity. 1-17. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2003.
  25. ^ a b c d e f Asad 2007.

Works cited

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  • Anjum, Ovamir (2018). "Interview with Talal Asad". American Journal of Islam and Society. 35 (1): 55–90. doi:10.35632/ajis.v35i1.812.
  • Asad, Talal (1968). The Kababish (PhD). University of Oxford. OCLC 46544933.
  • Asad, Talal. 1993. “Introduction” in Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam. 1-24. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 
  • Asad, Talal. 2003. “Introduction: Thinking about Secularism” in Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity. 1-17. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • Asad, Talal (2007). "On Suicide Bombing". The Arab Studies Journal. 15/16 (2/1): 123–130. JSTOR 27934028.
  • Chaghatai, M. Ikram. "Muhammad Asad – the first citizen of Pakistan". Iqbal Academy Pakistan. 
  • Connolly, William E. (2005). Pluralism. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822335672.
  • Eilts, John. 2006. "Talal Asad". Stanford Presidential Lectures in the Humanities and Arts. Accessed 7 May 2020.
  • Jakobsen, Jonas (2015). "8 Contextualising Religious Pain: Saba Mahmood, Axel Honneth, and the Danish Cartoons.". Recognition and Freedom. Brill. pp. 169–192.
  • Kessler, Gary E. (2012). Fifty Key Thinkers on Religion. Abingdon, England: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-203-80747-7.
  • Konopinski, Natalie (13 November 2020). "Tanya Asad". Anthropology News.
  • Landry, Jean-Michel (2016). "Les territoires de Talal Asad : Pouvoir, sécularité, modernité". L'Homme (in French). p. 77. ISSN 0439-4216.
  • Mirsepassi, Ali (2010). Political Islam, Iran, and the Enlightenment: Philosophies of Hope and Despair. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521745901.
  • Mozumder, Mohammad Golam Nabi (2011). Interrogating Post-Secularism: Jürgen Habermas, Charles Taylor, and Talal Asad (MA thesis). Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: University of Pittsburgh. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
  • Uğurlu, Ali M., 2017. ”Is There a Secular Tradition? On Treason, Government, and Truth.” (Thesis) City University of New York Academic Works.
  • Watson, Janell (November 2011). "Modernizing Middle Eastern Studies, Historicizing Religion, Particularizing Human Rights". The Minnesota Review. 2011 (77): 87–100. doi:10.1215/00265667-1422589. S2CID 153512468.

Further reading

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  • Asad's analysis of his development as an anthropologist through the lens of his life history:
  • Article exploring "the secular" as conceptualized by both Talal Asad, and the political theorist William E. Connolly:
    • Hirschkind, Charles (4 April 2011). "Is there a secular body?". ABC Religion & Ethics. ABC News (Australia). Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  • A discussion of Asad's concepts - "Talal Asad argues that, in tradition, religion is embodied in practices geared to producing particular virtues.":
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