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14 - On Sunni Sectarianism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

A. Kevin Reinhart
Affiliation:
University of Texas
Yasir Suleiman
Affiliation:
King's College, Cambridge
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Summary

At best, the term Sunnī is confusing, for it has been used, from the beginning, in special ways by those who wanted to use it exclusively for their own brand of orthodoxy. Some used it for those devoted purely to the use of hadith-reports (sunnah), without speculative discussion (kalām). It was used later, among those who were willing to accept kalām discussions at all, for the Ash‘arī or Māturīdī schools of kalām as against the Mu‘tazilī; it was used by sharī ah-minded zealots to distinguish sharī ah-minded people from the Ṣūfī mystics, and generally as the equivalent of the English ‘orthodox’

… (Hodgson 1974: 1, 278)

The Problem

Forty years after Hodgson wrote these words, Islamic studies scholars still use the term Sunni often (1) to mean whatever is not Shi‘i (or worse, whatever is not ‘Alid); and (2) to mean something like ‘orthodoxy’, that is, ‘mainstream’ Islam.

Other forms of Islam are hyphenated Islams – Shi‘i-Islam, Sufi-Islam, and so on. Aside from the unscholarly taking sides that this usage represents, using Sunnism as a default term for Islam, and Islam to mean Sunnism, not only hides the diversity of Islam but it obscures the fact that Sunnism too has a history that does not merely coincide with the history of ‘Islam’. Sunnism is a religious movement and, as such, it has a history within more general Islamic religious history.

Type
Chapter
Information
Living Islamic History
Studies in Honour of Professor Carole Hillenbrand
, pp. 209 - 225
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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