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The Idea of Islamic Media: The Qur'an and the Decolonization of Mass Communication
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2020
Abstract
The emergence of Islamic television in the Arab Middle East is usually explained as part of a Saudi media empire fueled by neoliberal petro-dollars. This article, by contrast, takes seriously the role ideas played alongside changing political economies in the origins of the world’s first Islamic television channel, Iqraa. Focusing on the intellectual and institutional career of “Islamic media” (al-i’lām al-Islāmī) as a category from the late sixties onwards in Egypt, I argue that Islamic television is part of a broader decolonization struggle involving the modern discipline of mass communication. Pioneering Arab communication scholars mounted a quest for epistemic emancipation in which the question of how to mediate Islam became inextricable from the question of what made media Islamic. Drawing on historical and ethnographic research, I show how the idea of Islamic media involved a radical reconceptualization of the Qur'an as mass communication from God and of Islam as a mediatic religion. This positing of an intimate affinity between Islam and media provoked secular skepticism and religious criticism that continue to this day. I conclude by reflecting on how the intellectual history of Islamic media challenges dominant framings of epistemological decolonization as a question of interrogating oppressive universalisms in favor of liberatory pluralisms.
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References
1 The conference took place at the triennial convention of the World Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY). WAMY is an affiliate of the Saudi-based Muslim World League, one of the most significant transnational institutions of religious propagation in the postcolonial period. See Aydin, Cemil, The Idea of the Muslim World: A Global Intellectual History (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017), 173–226Google Scholar.
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4 Qutb, al-Iʿlam al-Islami, 148. Although he was prolific, Qutb never published a book on Islamic media. His published oral comments at the conference resonate with his earlier written work on Islamic art; Manhaj al-Fann al-Islami (Cairo: Dar al-Qalam, 1963).
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8 Popular Salafi channels in Egypt during this time included al-Nas, al-Rahma, and al-Hikma, associated at various times with the Salafi preaching triumvirate of Muhammad Hassan, Abu Ishaq al-Huwayni, and Muhammad Yaʿqub.
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24 Egypt's first journalism departments were established in 1935 at the American University in Cairo and Fuad I's journalism and translation institute in 1939.
25 For example, drawing on his literary history training, Hamza painstakingly traced the Egyptian newspaper article's distinctive rhetorical evolution since the 19th century. Whereas, Hamza pointed out, standard press histories focus on who wrote what when, he wanted journalism students to appreciate that how Egyptians wrote also was important; Adab al-Maqala al-Suhufiyya fi Misr, al-Juz’ al-Awwal (Cairo: Dar al-Fikr al-ʿArabi, [1950] 1958). In 2018, the Egyptian General Book Authority reissued the eight volumes of this widely respected work in three parts and reprinted several other books of Hamza.
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31 Hamza, Adab al-Maqala, 9.
32 Official plans for establishing this new faculty in collaboration with the media and education ministries were announced in 1962. The faculty did not get its own building on the campus of Cairo University until the new millennium.
33 Hamza, al-Sahafa wa-l-Mujtamaʿ, 130.
34 Hamza, Qissat al-Sahafa, 13.
35 Hamza, al-Iʿlam la-hu Tarikhuhu, 8.
36 Although much has been made of the dominating influence of US scientism on Arab communication studies, Hamza looked to the trailblazing German journalism scholar Otto Groth (1875–1965). See Hepp, Andreas, Cultures of Mediatization (London: Polity Press, 2013)Google Scholar for a discussion of Groth.
37 See Kassab, Suzanne, Contemporary Arab Thought: Cultural Critique in Comparative Perspective (New York: Columbia University Press, 2009)Google Scholar, especially ch. 3.
38 Hamza,al-I'lam la-hu Tarikhuhu wa Madhahibuhu, 45.
39 Al-Maktaba al-Ishtirakiyya, Qa'ima Bibliyugrafiyya Mukhtara (Matbaʿat Dar al-Kutub, Cairo 1967).
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45 Ibid., 6–7.
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57 Imam, Ibrahim, al-‘Alaqat al-‘Amma wa-l-Mujtamaʿ (Cairo: Anglo-Egyptian Bookstore, 1957)Google Scholar.
58 Author interview with Tuhami Muntasir, 18 December 2018, Cairo. Muntasir was a member of the second graduating cohort from al-Azhar's media department, and his career included hosting religious programs on state and private channels, including Iqraa.
59 At his death, Imam was memorialized as “the dean of Arab media”; “Obituary of Dr. Ibrahim Imam Mahmud,” al-Ahram, 3 July 2000. Imam's wife (and former student) was ‘Awatif Husayn, editor in chief of Wakalat Anba’ al-Sharq al-Awsat.
60 Al-Tahami (d. 2017), who also became dean of the media faculty in 1985, wrote an early work on media and socialism titled al-Iʿlam wa-l-Tahhawul al-Ishtiraki (Cairo: Dar al-Maʿarif, 1966).
61 Ibrahim Imam, “al-Taslsul al-Shuyuʿi fi Dirasat al-Iʿlam,” al-Ahram, 14 January 1980, 13. Imam here deplores the Marxist revisionist critique of prominent Egyptian religious figures such as Muhammad ʿAbduh and its ostensible “declaration that those who think differently are traitors.” According to Di Capua, Egyptian university professors at the height of Nasser's cultural revolution in the 1960s spoke of “an atmosphere of bigotry, moral cowardice and fanaticism” and complained that those “who did not embrace socialism experienced the treatment”; Gatekeepers, 304.
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63 Author interview with Muntasir, 18 December 2018.
64 See Boyd, Douglas, “The Story of Radio in Saudi Arabia,” Public Telecommunications Review (1973): 53–60Google Scholar.
65 ‘Abd al-Qadir Hatim, Mudhakkirat ʿAbd al-Qadir Hatim, Ra'is Hukumat Harb Uktubir (Cairo: al-Hay'a al-ʿAmma li Qusur al-Thaqafa, 2016), 147–48. The religious endowments minister was not the only one to object to television: the education minister felt the money would be better spent on schools, and the agricultural minister worried that television would diminish farmers’ productivity (146–48). Hatim also remembers popular preachers such as Shaykh Kishk forbidding the purchase of television sets and declaring him, as the architect of state television, to be “in the hellfire” (153). In contrast, he recounts productive conversations with Shaykh Muhammad al-Ghazali about “new preaching styles” and media (305). Hatim would much later write his own book on media, Islamic, al-Iʿlam fi al-Qur'an al-Karim (Cairo: Egyptian General Book Authority, 2000)Google Scholar.
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69 Imam, al-Iʿlam al-Islami. There is a long history of Muslims coming to see various domains of knowledge—from grammar to medicine—as a collective obligation of faith (farḍ kifāya) “on which the survival and well-being of a community depend”; Dalal, Ahmed, Islam, Science and the Challenge of History (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2010), 113.Google Scholar
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73 The UNESCO report notes that a third of the Cairo University mass communication professors were teaching abroad in 1976–77; al-Sawi and Kandil, Teaching and Training, 15.
74 ‘Abd al-Halim Muhyi al-Din, al-Iʿlam al-Islami wa Tatbiqatuhu al-ʿAmaliyya (Cairo: Maktabat al-Khanji, 1980).
75 Yusuf, Muhammad Khayr Ramadan, al-Iʿlam al-Islami: Bibliyugrafiyya bi-l-Kutub wa-l-Rasa'il wa-l-Buhuth al-Jamiʿiyya (Riyadh: Dar Tuwayq al-Nashr wa-l-Tawziʻ, 1993)Google Scholar. Perhaps based on the conjunction of “public opinion” and “Islam” in the title, this bibliography lists as the first book on Islamic media Muhammad ʿAbd al-Raʾuf Bahnasi's al-Ra'y al-‘Amm fi al-Islam (Cairo: Muʾassasat al-Kutub al-Masri, 1966). However, the book is not concerned with public opinion as a media concept nor referenced by its contemporaneous or subsequent Arab media scholars.
76 Ghalwash, al-Iʿlam fi al-Quran; Sayyid Muhammad Sadati al-Shinqiti, Usul al-Iʿlam al-Islami wa Ususuhu: Dirasa Tahliliya li Nusus al-Akhbar fi Surat al-An'am (Riyadh: Dar ‘Alam al-Kitab, 1986).
77 Qur'an 39:27.
78 Ghalwash, al-Iʿlam fi al-Quran, 15.
79 Qutb, “al-Iʿlam al-Islami,” 161.
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81 See Ayish, “Communication Studies.”
82 Muhammad Abu Bakr Hamid, “ʿAbd al-Qadir Tash: Falsafat Hayatihi wa Aʿmalihi wa Riyadatuhu fi al-Iʿlam al-Islami,” Majallat al-Jazira, 17 July 2006, http://www.al-jazirah.com/culture/17072006/aoraq28.htm.
83 In his dissertation, Tash presents the familiar Islamist idea of Islam as a “comprehensive religion” with claims beyond what would be recognized as a “religious” sphere in the secularized West. For media, he cites Hamza's 1971 book for evidence; Abdulkader Tash, “A Profile of Professional Journalists Working in the Saudi Arabian Daily Press,” (PhD diss., Southern Illinois University–Carbondale, 1983).
84 See for example Shohat, Ella and Stam, Robert, Unthinking Eurocentrism: Multiculturalism and the Media (London: Routledge, 1994)Google Scholar; Curran, James and Park, Myung-Jin, eds. De-Westernizing Media Studies (New York: Routledge, 2002)Google Scholar.
85 This approach reflected the wider zeitgeist that was shaped by critiques of media dependency and one-way news flows from the West to the Rest that coalesced around New World Information Order debates at the United Nations. These critiques informed the research and teaching agendas at Carbondale during Tash's time; Tash's media program attracted many students from the global South; author Skype interview with Sharon Murphy, 9 July 2018 (Murphy chaired Tash's doctoral dissertation committee).
86 ‘Abd al-Qadir Tash, “Hal Nahtaj ila Qana Fada'iyya Islamiyya?” in al-Thaqafa wa-l-Iʿlam wa-Ma Baynahuma (Jeddah: Sharikat al-Madina al-Munawwara li-l-Tibaʿa wa-l-Nashr, 1997): 97–104.
87 Ibid., 100, 102.
88 ʿAbd al-Qadir Tash, “al-Markaz al-ʿAlami li-l-Iʿlam al-Islami: Hulm Hal Yatahaqqaq?” in al-Thaqafa, 119.
89 ʿAbd al-Qadir Tash, “al-Itar al-Thaqafi li-l-Iʿlam al-Islami,” in al-Thaqafa, 82–83.
90 ʿAbd al-Qadir Tash, “Masʾuliyyat al-Sahafa al-Islamiyya fi Tarshid Masirat al-Sahwa,” in al-Iʿlam wa Qadaya al-Waqiʿ al-Islami (Riyadh: Obekan Publishing, 1995).
91 Galal, Ehab, “Saleh Kamel: Investing in Islam,” in Arab Media Moguls, ed. Sakr, Naomi (London: Bloomsbury, 2015)Google Scholar.
92 Author interview with Muntasir, 18 December 2018.
93 Abdul Qader Tash, “Islamic Satellite Channels and Their Impact on Arab Societies: Iqra Channel; A Case Study,” Arab Media and Society, 1 November 2004, https://www.arabmediasociety.com/islamic-satellite-channels-and-their-impact-on-arab-societies-iqra-channel-a-case-study.
94 The new preachers (al-duaʿā al-judud) are so named because of their novel styles of television preaching. During my fieldwork in the 2010s, the trio of Amr Khaled, Muʿizz Masʿud and Mustafa Husni were the most famous, and all three have had programs on Iqraa.
95 See Samantha Shapiro, “Ministering to the Upwardly Mobile Muslim,” New York Times, 30 April 2006.
96 Khaled Hroub puts it starkly: “The motives behind the foundation of the very first influential religious channel, Iqra', in 1998 were almost exclusively commercial”; “Introduction: Religious Broadcasting; Beyond the Innocence of Political Indifference,” in Religious Broadcasting in the Middle East, ed. Khaled Hroub (London: Hurst, 2012), 283. For similar arguments on new preachers such as Amr Khaled, see Patrick Haenni and Hussam Tamam, “Chat Shows, Nashid Groups and Lite Preaching: Egypt's Air-Conditioned Islam,” Le Monde Diplomatique, September 2003; and, more recently, Kenney, Jeffrey, “Selling Success, Nurturing the Self: Self-Help Literature, Capitalist Values and the Sacralization of Subjective Life in Egypt,” International Journal of Middle East Studies 47, no. 4 (2015): 667CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
97 This inattention extends to other Arab intellectual projects and is symptomatic of the global asymmetry of knowledge production. See Jens Hansenn and Max Weiss, eds., Arabic Thought against the Authoritarian Age: Towards an Intellectual History of the Present (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2018).
98 Industry-generated audience assessments are scarce in the region, but a 2009 survey puts viewer preference for religious channels at 10 percent in Egypt and 7 percent in Saudi Arabia, far behind movies, at 20 and 22 percent respectively; Dubai Press Club, Arab Media Outlook 2009–2013: Inspiring Local Content; Forecasts and Analysis of Traditional and Digital Media in the Arab World (Dubai: Dubai Press Club, 2010), https://fas.org/irp/eprint/arabmedia.pdf.
99 Ayish, “Communication Studies,” 474. Elsewhere Ayish devotes a paragraph to “Islamic communication,” characterizing it as “no more than an exposition of how mass media could be used to propagate Islamic ideas and concepts around the world. Such efforts fell short of meeting the minimum requirements of model building in theoretical and methodological terms”; “Cultural Studies in Arab World Academic Communication Programmes: The Battle for Survival,” in Arab Cultural Studies: Mapping the Field, ed. Tarik Sabry (London: I. B. Tauris, 2012), 94.
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104 Khiabany, Gholam, “De-Westernizing Media Theory or Reverse Orientalism: ‘Islamic Communication’ as Theorized by Hamid Mowlana,” Media, Culture and Society 25 (2003): 415–22Google Scholar.
105 Salomon, For Love of the Prophet, 67, 188.
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