Linked e-resources

Details

Acknowledgements; Contents; Abbreviations; List of Tables; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Conceptual Framework and Methodology; References; 2 (In)compatibility of Islam and Capitalism: A Historical Perspective; 2.1 Islam and Capitalism: Foe or Friend?; 2.2 Islamist and Neo-Islamist Intellectuals on Islam and Capitalism; References; 3 Emergence of Neo-Islamic Economic Capital in Turkey; 3.1 An Overview of the Turkish Economy in the Twentieth Century; 3.2 Turkish Economy Between the 1950s and 1970s: Sowing the "Islamic Capital"; 3.3 Islamist and Neo-Islamist Intellectuals on Islam and Capitalism

3.4 Turkish Economy in the 1990s: The National Outlook Movement (NOM) and Growth of Islamic Capital3.5 February 28, 1997: Post-Modern Coup and Troubling Times for the "Islamic Capital"; 3.6 Turkish Economy in the 2000s: The JDP and Harvesting of Islamic Capital; 3.6.1 Islamic Financial Institutions; 3.6.2 Islamic Financial Institutions in Turkey; 3.7 Conclusion; References; 4 Emergence of Neo-Islamic Political Capital in Turkey; 4.1 Right Wing and Islamist Politics Until the 1980s; 4.2 A Turning Point: The 1980 Military Intervention and Reorganization Islamic Politics

4.3 Domestic and International Impacts on the Rise of Islamic Politics4.3.1 Turkish-Islam Synthesis; 4.3.2 Proliferation of Islamic Groups and Activities; 4.3.3 NOM Tradition and the Welfare Party (WP); 4.3.4 The "Post-modern" Coup of 1997; 4.4 From the NOM to the JDP: Traditionalists Versus Reformists; 4.5 Turkish Democracy After the Failed Coup of July 15, 2016; 4.6 İGİAD's Perception of Islamic Political Transformation in Turkey; 4.7 Conclusion; References; 5 Emergence of Neo-Islamic Cultural Capital in Turkey; 5.1 Formation of the Islamic Cultural Capital and New Opportunity Spaces

5.2 Institutionalization of Islamic Education5.3 Islamic Print and Media; 5.4 Commodification of Islamic Culture; 5.5 Conclusion; References; 6 From Islamic Radicalism to Islamic Capitalism: The Case of İGİAD; 6.1 Birth of "Homo-Islamicus": MÜSİAD and the Opportunities of Muslim Entrepreneurship; 6.2 From MÜSİAD to İGİAD: The Limits of Muslim Entrepreneurship; 6.3 İGİAD: From Radical Muslims to Entrepreneur Muslims; 6.3.1 İGİAD's History and Membership; 6.3.2 İGİAD's Mission; 6.3.3 İGİAD's Vision; 6.3.4 İGİAD's Organization; 6.3.5 İGİAD's Activities

6.4 Overcoming the Challenges of Capitalism: Moralizing Capitalism6.4.1 Capitalism Redefined; 6.4.2 Consumption and Luxury Redefined: Need Versus Waste; 6.5 İGİAD, the JDP, and Democracy; 6.6 Conclusion; References; 7 Islamic Capitalism and Its Discontents; 7.1 Anti-capitalist Muslims, a.k.a. Socialist Islamists as Dissenters; 7.2 Radical Islamists as Dissenters; 7.3 Orthodox Islamists as Dissenters; 7.4 İGİAD Members as Dissenters; References; 8 Conclusion: "Serveti Değil Sermayeyi Artırmalıyız"; Bibliography; Index

Browse Subjects

Show more subjects...

Statistics

from
to
Export