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Islam

A Short History

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

For years she was tagged the "runaway nun," the rebellious ex-Catholic with outspoken opinions about religion--comparing, for example, Pope John Paul II to a Muslim fundamentalist.Now, with her 12th book, Islam, a Short History, Karen Armstrong has changed her image. She can still be sharp-tongued, inclined to draw conclusions that get a rise out of critics. But something closer to reconciliation, rather than anger, is propelling her. The title of her lecture is "Islam: A Short History."

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      An introduction to the history of Islam provides listeners with a greater understanding of world events without burying them in the minutiae of the past 2,000 years. The special challenges of nonfiction narration sometimes defeat even the most savvy performer. Too much drama, too damped down an inflection leading to monotone, the pitfalls are many. Davidson avoids the traps neatly and delivers an accomplished and beautifully modulated reading. He moves you smoothly from Muhammad the Prophet through the splitting of Islam into Sunnism, Shiism, and Sufi mysticism and the various conquerers and conquered right up to present day. From one of our most highly respected religious scholars, this is an accessible and nicely thought-out history. Whether you come away wanting to pursue the subject further or just feeling better qualified to understand the evening news, this is an essential read. D.G. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 21, 2000
      Readers seeking a quick but thoughtful introduction to Islam will want to peruse Armstrong's latest offering. In her hallmark stylish and accessible prose, the author of A History of God takes readers from the sixth-century days of the Prophet Muhammad to the present. Armstrong writes about the revelations Muhammad received, and explains that the Qur'an earned its name (which means recitation) because most of Muhammad's followers were illiterate and learned his teachings not from reading them but hearing them proclaimed aloud. Throughout the book, Armstrong traces what she sees as Islam's emphasis on right living ( la Judaism) over right belief ( la Christianity). Armstrong is at her most passionate when discussing Islam in the modern world. She explains antagonisms between Iraqi Muslims and Syrian Muslims, and discusses the devastating consequences of modernization on the Islamic world. Unlike Europe, which modernized gradually over centuries, the Islamic world had modernity thrust upon it in an exploitative manner. The Islamic countries, Armstrong argues, have been "reduced to a dependent bloc by the European powers." Armstrong also rehearses some basics about Islamic fundamentalism in a section that will be familiar to anyone who has read her recent study, The Battle for God. A useful time line and a guide to the "Key Figures in the History of Islam" complete this strong, brisk survey of 1,500 years of Islamic history.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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