Islamic History As World History - IJMES - .1979
Islamic History As World History - IJMES - .1979
Islamic History As World History - IJMES - .1979
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Int. J. Middle East Stud. o0 (1979), 241-264 Printed in Great Britain 241
EdmundBurke, III
At a time when orientalism is under attack both from within and without
the profession, the publication of Marshall G. S. Hodgson's three-volume work,
The Venture of Islam: Conscience and History in a World Civilization' is an
event of major importance. So rich is its subject, so complex and ambitious its
analytic scheme and serious its moral purpose that it is difficult in brief compass
to give an idea of the book. In the following pages, I discuss those aspects of the
work that seem to me most important for an understanding of its achievement
and significance. In the end, I shall argue, The Venture of Islam must be seen as
the most ambitious and successful effort to salvage the orientalist tradition to date.
Having said this, I should add that The Venture of Islam is also a controversial
work, one likely to generate continuing debate both on points of detail and on
its overall vision of the history of Islamic civilization. This it is deliberately,
combatively, and at times perversely.2 Already, it has been criticized as a highly
personal and partisan account. Such charges, it must be said, are true, but they
are also beside the point. Indeed, the very greatness of the book stems from
Hodgson's own personality, his cranky obsession with terminology and pre-
suppositions, his insistence on seeing Islamic civilization in a world historical
context, and his stubborn Quaker moral conscience. The rest is scholarly mono-
graphs. There is much about Hodgson's spirit that recalls the youthful im-
patience with mediocrity which so marked the writings of Marc Bloch and Lucien
Febvre, the founders of the Annales school.3 Perhaps it is not too much to hope
1 Marshall G. S. Hodgson, The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World
Civilization (3 vols.; Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1974), Vol. i, The Classical
Age of Islam; Vol. 2, The Expansion of Islam in the Middle Periods; and Vol. 3, The
GunpowderEmpires and Modern Times.
2 Hodgson's footnotes are one of the delights of the work and are not be overlooked.
They collectively provide a systematic settling of accounts with the field, and a fertile
list of topics for future research.
3 I am thinking especially of Lucien Febvre's Combats pour l'histoire (Paris, 1953),
portions of which have been published in English as A New Kind of History (New York,
1973). Hodgson's effort differs from that of the Annales historians, of course, in that he
focused upon the study of civilizations (understood chiefly in terms of the high cultural
artifacts of the major literary traditions), while they emphasized social and economic
history. It is in the spirit of the two, and the concern with methodology, that they resemble
one another.
0020-7438/79/0200-020I $o0.50 ? 1979 Cambridge University Press
242 Edmund Burke, III
4 Saul
Bellow, To Jerusalem and Back: A Personal Account (New York: Macmillan,
1976), PP. 0o5-I09.
5 See the Preface by Smith for an account of the state of the manuscript on Hodgson's
death, and the nature of his editorial assistance. In general, Smith was scrupulous to
avoid changes that went beyond the stylistic. The published version of the work is thus
substantially as Hodgson left it.
Islamic History as World History 243
articles like his 'Salman Pak et les premices spirituelles de l'Islam iranien9),
and the latter's efforts to achieve an understanding of Islam from within. From
Massignon, Hodgson has borrowed the psychosociological 'science of com-
passion.' It is the constant effort of the scholar to 'never be satisfied to cease
asking "but why?" until he had driven his understanding to the point where he
has an immediate grasp of what a given position meant, such that every nuance
of the data is accounted for and withal, given a total of presuppositions and
circumstances, he could feel himself doing the same.'10
Ultimately, it is to Wilhelm Dilthey and Carl Jung that Hodgson looks for the
justification of this application of the principle of verstehen. Characteristically,
where with Massignon this method often resulted in a murky mysticism,
Hodgson makes of it a controlled effort of the historical imagination.
John Woolman, an eighteenth-century American Quaker, is the other major
guide to understanding Hodgson's intent. Scarcely known today outside of the
Society of Friends, Woolman in his own time was a pacifist, an opponent of
slavery, and a sharp critic of the mercantile values of colonial Pennsylvania.
His Journal has continued to exert an enormous influence among Quakers."
It is with an epigram from Woolman that the work begins: 'To consider mankind
otherwise than brethren, to think favors are peculiar to one nation and to exclude
others, plainly supposes a darkness in the understanding.' The citation is clearly
intended as an implicit judgment upon the smug Europocentrism that has in-
formed most of the writing on Islam by Western scholars. With this device em-
blazoned on his escutcheon, Hodgson sets forth to combat the many errors
and presuppositions of previous studies. A central purpose of The Venture of
Islam is to demonstrate the possibilities of a new kind of Islamic history, methodo-
logically self-conscious and guided by a more adequate framework of world history.
Hodgson argues his case at length in the text and in the numerous footnotes
sprinkled throughout the work. It is for this reason that the work begins with a
lengthy methodological section entitled 'Introduction to the Study of Islamic
Civilization.' In this syllabus of errors, we see Hodgson at his most polemical,
as well as his most teacherly. The central concepts and epistemological assump-
tions of orientalism and of civilizational studies are submitted to scathing exam-
ination. Nothing is exempt, not even the venerable Mercator projection map,
which Hodgson argues is a 'Jim-Crow projection' that has seriously warped our
image of the world.
In a more general sense, the citation of Woolman serves to focus attention
on Hodgson's Quaker beliefs. In ways both great and small, The Venture of
Islam is marked by the impress of Hodgson's Quaker conscience. It is axiomatic
for Hodgson that 'the individual sensibility, focused in a point of conscience,
is one of the ultimate roots of history.' A major theme of the three volumes is
from so many ages and climes, and so rich in new ideas and concepts, that the
reader may miss the fact that it is built upon an explicit framework of world
history and a theory of civilizational studies. This section treats Hodgson's
attempt to situate Islamic history in a world historical context - a necessary
preliminary to which is a searching examination of the methodological pre-
suppositions of the orientalist tradition. The following section treats Hodgson's
theory of civilizational studies.
Marshall Hodgson was not only a person of humanistic conscience and
eclectic, far-ranging curiosity - he was also a systematic thinker who delighted
in the search for patterns in world history. Long before the current impasse of
the orientalist tradition had become glaringly evident, Hodgson was already
convinced of the need for a radical reorientation of our historical and geo-
graphical attitudes toward the rest of the world. In my opinion, the effort to
write a history of Islamic civilization informed by the multiple awarenesses that
derive from such an undertaking constitutes Hodgson's most important achieve-
ment. One may dispute his views of particular features of the civilization which
he calls Islamic: nonetheless, he has accomplished a feat of enormous significance
in enabling us to see, for the first time, that civilization whole and entire in its
unfolding through time and in its relations with its neighbors.
It is crucial to an understanding of The Ventureof Islam to recognize that it is
based upon an explicit framework of world history, and that its author was at
once profoundly immersed in the classics of Islamic civilization and a world
historian. Hodgson left several hundred pages of an uncompleted world history
at his death. What that finished work would have looked like, we cannot say.
But its general outlines are clear from his previous work. Among Hodgson's
earliest publications is an article which appeared in the Journal of World
History in 1954 called 'Hemispheric Interregional History as an Approach to
World History.'12 Here in brilliant but highly schematic outline are to be found
the central themes that subsequent works would but fill out in greater detail.13
In this article Hodgson argues that a necessary preliminary to a new framework
of world history is a systematic criticism of the basic presuppositions of Western
historiography. Only with a radical reorientation of our historical and geograph-
ical attitudes about the world is it possible to undertake this task. Accordingly,
an important segment of Hodgson's energies are focused in this article upon the
methodology of world history. Only with this accomplished does he go on to
present his own framework.
Hodgson's critique of the Western tradition of world history centers on such
issues as the problem of perspective (in world historical terms, Europe is a
fringe area of the Afro-Eurasian zone of agrarianate citied life, and it does not
emerge on the center of the world stage until 800o),the problem of terminology
(the use of such truncating terms as 'the Orient' and 'Asia' as opposed to 'the
Occident' and 'the West' to refer to the rest of human literate society), and the
unconscious racism of the Mercator projection map (with its Eurocentric
distortion of the southern hemisphere). The lines of argument developed by
Hodgson in this article provide the basis of his criticisms of the orientalist
tradition in the 'Introduction to the Study of Islamic Civilization' which opens
the first volume of The Venture of Islam. A brief digression to consider these
criticisms should make clear the radical nature of Hodgson's conception of his
task.
Hodgson's attack on the orientalist tradition of scholarship is noteworthy
for several reasons. One is that it comes from someone whose training, and in
many ways professional self-image, were those of an orientalist. Among the
most successful passages in The Venture of Islam are those in which Hodgson
works his way through a text, guiding the reader to a richer and more complete
understanding of the resonance it must have had in its own time and place. Yet
Hodgson was profoundly discontented with the results of the philological ap-
proach to civilizations. He was in search of a more complex vision, one less the
prisoner of a narrow textualism and more open to the interplay of cultures across
linguistic barriers. He was opposed to the epistemological assumptions that
inform the orientalist tradition. Finally, he insisted that discussions of Islamic
culture be securely rooted in a historically specific context. Hodgson's critique of
orientalism is therefore one that comes, in a sense, from within the tradition.
But it is also, revealingly, one that is based upon a radically different conception
of the nature of the historian's task.
Most recent attacks upon orientalism have emerged within the context of the
anticolonial struggle.14 Insofar as orientalism served as a cover and justification
for Western dominance, this was no doubt inevitable and even (despite certain
excesses) justifiable. While by no means indifferent to the political uses to which
orientalism has been put, Hodgson situates the problem at a more general
level of discourse.15Thus he distinguishes five frameworks within which students
of Islamic studies have tended to operate: Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Marx-
ism, and what he calls 'Westernism,' each with its own characteristic set of
epistemological assumptions and complementary patterns of distortion. Yet the
absence of explicit commitment to one of these traditions, Hodgson points out,
provides no assurance of objectivity. Indeed, he says, it may simply disguise an
unanalyzed, piecemeal commitment to partisan viewpoints. Similarly, 'it is no
14Among others, see A. L. Tibawi, 'English Speaking Orientalists: A Critique of
Their Approach to Islam and to Arab Nationalism,' Muslim World, 53, 3-4 (I963),
185-204, 298-313; Anouar Abdel-Malek, 'L'Orientalisme en crise,' Diogene, 24 (1963),
109-142; Abdullah Laroui, L'Ideologie arabe contemporaine (Paris, 1967) and La crise
des intellectuels arabes: traditionalisme ou historicisme? (Paris, 1974). See also Albert
Hourani, 'Islam and the Philosophers of History,' Middle Eastern Studies, 3 (i967),
206-268, and Edward Said, Orientalism (New York: Atheneum, 1978).
15 The Venture of Islam, I, 26-30.
248 Edmund Burke, III
age (since 1800 C.E.) The term Axial age Hodgson borrows from Karl Jaspers
to refer to the great period of cultural fluorescence which was formative of
Chinese, Indian, Mediterranean, and Irano-Semitic civilizations. Islamic
civilization emerges in the post-Axial period of agrarianate citied life. With the
emergence of Islamic civilization, the Nile to Oxus zone, which had hitherto
been divided into warring camps, reasserts its primacy within the ecumene. While
preceding centuries had witnessed the gradual development of a tendency toward
religious communalism within the region, with separate literary languages
carrying different strands of a common cultural tradition, the coming of Islam
reversed this trend, and witnessed the unfolding of a cosmopolitan civilization
carried by first one, then several Islamic languages. In world historical terms,
Islamic civilization represented an attempt to establish a total civilization on a
hemisphere-wide basis, embracing most of the ecumene. The Islamic venture
underwent a series of transformations over time. Not until the onset of modernity
did the persisting regional configurations within the ecumene reassert themselves,
and unifying forces gradually weaken. The way was left open for European
domination, followed by the rise of nationalism in the Islamic world.
Central to Hodgson's method of doing world history is his use of ideal types
to inform and orient his analysis. This gives his study of Islamic civilization an
analytical power lacking in other parallel efforts. While critical of aspects of the
work of Max Weber, Hodgson has evidently learned much from it. But it is the
method of Weber, and not so much his conclusions, which Hodgson has adopted.
Thus, for example, his use of the twin concepts of agrarianate citied life and
technicalism underpins his efforts at explaining what it is which sets off the pre-
modern era (to c. I800 C.E.) from the modern age. As we shall see shortly,
Hodgson has derived a series of ideal types which he associates with each of the
major phases of Islamic civilization, based upon their social, economic, and
cultural characteristics. The pyramiding of these ideal types thus provides
The Venture of Islam with an architectonic structure of extraordinary richness
and complexity. (Those who have misread Hodgson's intent as merely descrip-
tive should look again.)
An examination of the ideal types developed by Hodgson to replace the
tradition/modernity dichotomy, that of the Agrarian age and Technicalism,
may serve to illustrate his overall method. The first concept of this couplet,
the Agrarian age, refers to all of human history from the rise of civilizations
until roughly 800o. It is developed in the opening section of Volume One in
considerable detail. Civilizations of the premodern era, Hodgson posits, were
ultimately based upon their ability to extract land rents of some sort, with other
sources of wealth playing a distinctly secondary role. The surplus generated by
the agrarian economy was thus limited by the possibilities of agricultural pro-
duction. Neither commerce nor industrial production (still less pastoralism)
could provide sufficient revenue to supplant the primary dependence of the
privileged classes upon agriculture. Since literacy was a virtual monopoly of the
privileged, the cultural production of a given society was in turn dependent
250 Edmund Burke, III
must remember that the study of civilizations had an honored place at the
University of Chicago during the period he was writing The Venture of Islam.
Although Hodgson struggles valiantly to rehabilitate the concept of civilization,
I find this level of his analysis the most difficult to accept. Yet even here, the
great care which he has taken to make himself understood makes a dialogue
possible. Grant him his initial premises, and he can make a powerful case for
himself. What is Hodgson's approach to civilizational studies? How does it
inform his understanding of Islamic civilization?
Those who would utilize the concept of civilization must deal with the
extensive criticisms that have been made of it.25 A major difficulty facing those
who have employed it has been the tendency to view civilizations as timeless
essences whose fate is predetermined at the moment of inception by their
constituent elements. Islamic civilization has frequently been viewed in this
way. A second difficulty has been in distinguishing between civilizations and
cultures. (How large a unit is the term 'civilization' to include? A city-state?
A literate tradition? An empire?) A third and related problem is that of deter-
mining where one civilization leaves off and another begins. (Viewed in one way,
Christian Byzantium is a part of Greek civilization; viewed in another, it is a
part of Christendom.) A final criticism is the culturalist bias of civilizational
studies. What connections are to be made between the level of elite lettered
culture (on which the study of civilizations necessarily operates), and the historic-
ally specific social and economic contexts in which the civilization is rooted,
across regional and class lines? It is a merit of Hodgson's approach that he
recognizes the cogency of these criticisms, and he seeks to provide answers to
them.
Central to Hodgson's approach is the notion that cultures and civilizations
are dynamic rather than static, and that they are characterized by internal
differentiation and continuing dialogue with their formative ideals such that
certain ideals may dominate at one point, only to recede later. Civilizations, then,
are not determined once and for all by their intellectual traits (let alone essences),
and they are not the prisoners of the dead hand of the past. A civilization, for
Hodgson, is a compound culture, 'a relatively extensive grouping of interrelated
cultures insofar as they have shared in cumulative traditions in the form of
high culture, on the urban, literate level.'26 As for the difficulty of deciding to
which civilization a particular cultural entity belongs, Hodgson sensibly points
out that such questions cannot be conclusively resolved. For some purposes,
Islamic civilization may be viewed as continuous with the Irano-Semitic
tradition, and for others it is radically discontinuous. Hodgson is careful to
define civilizations in an open-ended way, without reference to supposed life
cycles: his discussions are exempt from hypostasizing so-called innate traits in
particular civilizations.
What is Islamic about Islamic civilization? Hodgson's response reveals his
general approach to civilizational studies. It is the presence of Islamic ideals,
he argues, that marks off Islamic civilization from those that preceded it. These
ideals provide the central standards of legitimation of the society. The dialogue
of successive generations of Muslims with these ideals, that is, with the Qur'anic
message as revealed to Muhammad, constitutes (in a sense constructs) the
civilization of Islam. In this dialogue, there have been two major variants: the
Sunni tradition and the Shi'a tradition. The main bearers of these ideals at any
one time were not numerous, certainly never as extensive as the literate popu-
lation. Rather, their numbers were limited to the small group of individuals
who in every age have taken for themselves the task of seeking to realize these
ideals. This group Hodgson calls the 'piety-minded' (or later, the 'shari'a-
minded'). The civilization produced by them can be considered in two dimen-
sions. Most narrowly, it can be considered as religious, and the ensuing dialogue
as a religious one. But it can also be considered in its wider, civilizational,
aspects (including Christians, Jews, and other non-Muslims insofar as they
participated in the dialogue). To clearly distinguish the latter from the former,
Hodgson has coined the term Islamicate (on the model of Italianate).
The enormous extent of Islamic civilization also poses a problem for Hodgson.
How is it possible to speak meaningfully about a civilization which spanned the
Afro-Eurasian ecumene from Morocco to China, and which has endured from
the seventh century until the present? The criticisms of those interested in
tracing the social and economic history of specific parts of the Islamic world
acquire pertinence at this point. Hodgson agrees that a civilizational history
cannot address the diverse experiences of Muslims (especially nonelite ones)
living in a variety of historically specific times and places. There is thus an
important range of problems about which Hodgson concedes that he can say
little. But, he argues, if one is interested in the unity, rather than the diversity,
of the historical experience of Muslims, then the concept of civilization acquires
cogency, and social and economic historians can have little to contribute at this
level of analysis. There is a unity to Islamic civilization, at least until modern
times, because Muslims (unlike Christians and Buddhists) remained in contact
with one another and with the formative ideals of their civilization. There is an
integrality to their dialogue down through the ages which makes Islamic civiliza-
tion susceptible of being studied historically. Muslims shared a common point
of departure, a common vocabulary, and (until relatively late) several common
languages for discussing a range of important topics.27
Hodgson's approach to civilizational studies has some important advantages.
The notion of a dialogue with the formative ideals permits him to conceive of
an Islamic civilization that is sufficiently generously defined so as to admit all
27 See Hodgon's essay, 'The Unity of Later Islamic History,' Journal of World History,
5 (1960), 879-914, for a discussion of the problem of unity.
Islamic History as World History 255
able.' Thus 'the very excellence with which Islamicate culture had met the
needs of the Agrarian age may have impeded its advance beyond it.'28
Hodgson's theory of civilizational studies suggests that an inherently con-
servative culture will be offset by the periodic interventions of the men and women
of conscience in each era, whose insights forge new strands in the ongoing
cultural dialogue. This approach is successful as a pedagogical device. The reader
is encouraged to take seriously the historical context in which these figures
lived, and not merely to content himself with the putative contributions of
each to Islamic history. Without this method, the tendency of Hodgson's mind
toward abstract thinking would totally overwhelm, and his argument would be
less convincing. Yet there are serious objections which can be raised against a
theory of civilizations which places such weight upon the experiences of a few
quite atypical individuals. Not only is Hodgson's theory too much the affair
of Weberian virtuosos; in addition, we are not informed of the criteria by which
they have been selected. Hodgson's piety-minded individuals appear larger than
life, while ordinary Muslim men and women, who had no such exalted notions
of the faith and culture in which they were embedded, are largely unrecognized,
their concerns unvoiced, their connections with the great tradition (and other
lesser traditions) largely unexamined.
Hodgson's approach to civilizations is vulnerable on other grounds as well.
A major conceptual problem lies in his idea that civilizations can be characterized
by their formative ideals. But, we may inquire, how does one select which of the
numerous ideals that can be extracted from the Qur'an and other authoritative
Muslim writings are to be regarded as formative? While the problem of deciding
what constitutes 'real Islam' is put out by the door (by admitting a plurality of
dialogues), it returns by the window. Hodgson's personal moral stance was so
bound up with his sense of what Islamic civilization was all about that his views
about what constituted its formative ideals cannot help but be influenced. By
emphasizing the personal moral responsibility of the individual Muslim before
God, and even more so by advancing an interpretation of the principles of the
shari'a which emphasizes the rights of individuals against the collectivity (especi-
ally the state), Hodgson has boldly challenged the less moralistic interpretations
of Gibb, von Grunebaum, and others. He has also laid himself open to the
same charge of hypostasizing which he levels at others. Thus while Hodgson's
intensely personal and obsessively systematic approach to civilizational studies
has much to commend it, it is by no means exempt from criticism. In the search
for a more adequate approach to civilizational studies, the idealist assumptions
on which it is constructed (despite the sophistication of their presentation)
continue to be, for this reader at least, unacceptable. The important question
remains: is it possible to write meaningfully about civilizations without making
such assumptions? What seems needed is an approach to culture which makes
of it neither a mere reflection of material conditions nor the unfolding of an
ideal essence through time. For all its Eurocentrism, the more open, less system-
atic approach of McNeill seems preferable.
The Ventureof Islam has a kind of architectonic structure, the complex pattern-
ing of whose major components is traced on a variety of different levels of
abstraction. It also invokes a rather different periodization of Islamic history,
or rather a whole series of them. What sort of Islamic history does this pro-
duce? How does Hodgson's version of that history jibe with the standard
accounts? What, finally, are the chief advantages of his effort to insert Islamic
history into a world historical context? In addressing these questions, I shall
necessarily leave aside the numerous points of detail where Hodgson has erred,
or where recent developments in the field have passed him by, since in a work of
this scope there must inevitably be many. First, we look at Hodgson's interpre-
tation of Islamic history.
On the most general level of abstraction, it is Hodgson's thesis that Islamic
civilization served chiefly to institutionalize the more egalitarian and cosmopoli-
tan tendencies in Irano-Semitic culture, giving a key role to the urban and
communal expectations associated with the prominence of mercantile interests
in the Nile-to-Oxus region. In a posthumous article, he argued that the develop-
ment of these egalitarian and cosmopolitan features within the region has been
the chief role of Islam in world history.29
On another level of abstraction, the history of Islamic civilization can be
divided into three parts, the Formative Period, the Middle Periods, and the
period of the Gunpowder Empires and Modern Times. One volume of The
Venture of Islam is devoted to each. In the Formative Period (c. 600-945 C.E.),
the chief developments are the replacement of Syriac and Pahlavi as the main
vehicles of culture by Arabic, the emergence of a single comprehensive Muslim
community in place of the earlier communal divisions of the region, and the
failure of efforts to reestablish an absolutist agrarian empire, resulting in the
development of a new, more flexible kind of social order. The Middle Periods
(945-1503 c.E.) are marked by the emergence of an international society based
upon the separation between state and society, the diffusion of Sufism, the
development of Persian as a second major language of Islamic high culture,
and the coming to maturity of the dialogue between the intellectual traditions.
The Middle Periods were for Hodgson the high point of Islamic civilization,
in which a cosmopolitan high culture coexisted with a society of great flexibility.
The third phase of Islamic history, that of the Gunpowder Empires and Modern
Times, is characterized by the reassertion of the old communal and regional
divisions within the ecumene. New regional empires were formed: the Mughal,
the Safavi, and the Ottoman, but they only partly compensated for the political
29 Marshall G. S. Hodgson, 'The Role of Islam in World International
History,'
Journal of Middle East Studies, i, I (1970), 99-I23.
258 Edmund Burke, III
prophetic monotheism. The touchstone of his analysis is his emphasis upon the
formative effect of the assertion of shar'i concepts of legal and social relations
upon the social and political organization of the community of believers. The
second major intellectual tradition which gradually became folded into the
emerging Islamic cultural dialogue was the Persian tradition of absolutist rule.
Hodgson shows how the development of the courtly culture of adab built
upon, yet also transformed, this tradition as it came into dialogue with the other
emerging Islamic intellectual traditions. The tradition of Greek natural science
and philosophy (essentially the legacy of Hellenism) is the third major avenue
along which Islamic thought tended to develop. Like the adab tradition,
initially at odds with the concerns of the piety-minded, the tradition of falsafah
gradually became incorporated into the Islamic dialogue, as a result especially
of the work of al-Farabi and Ibn Sina. By the end of the High Caliphate, the
intellectual traditions had achieved fully Islamic form. From then onward, their
mutual interpenetration and interaction helped to shape the fabric of Islamic
culture. By the sixteenth century, while the capacity for self-renewal of the
civilizational dialogue had not totally disappeared, increasingly the natural
tendencies toward cultural conservatism of the Agrarian age had reasserted
themselves. Accordingly, the Safavi, no less than the Ottoman and the Mughal,
efforts at a cultural renewal were unsuccessful. In modern times the Islamic
heritage has had diminished relevance to Muslims, as under the impact of
technicalism, it no less than the other principal religious heritages had had to
contend with a radically altered context for historic action. This, in highly
schematic form, is the structure of the history of Islamic culture as it is presented
by Hodgson.
Corresponding to each of Hodgson's six phases of Islamic history is a political
formation, presented in the guise of an ideal type: Arab rule, caliphal absolu-
tism, the a'ydn/amir system, the military patronage stage, the gunpowder
empires, modern nation-states. During the first phase of Islamic history, society
was organized around the principle of the primacy of the Arabs. Political
legitimacy was based upon the notion ofjamd'ah - the necessity of unity among
the ruling caste of Arab Muslims.
During the phase of caliphal absolutism, which began in late Marwanid
times and continued till 945 C.E.,the old tradition of Persian kingship powerfully
influenced the organization of the state around a centralized imperial bureaucracy
and army. Although many of the piety-minded opposed caliphal absolutism,
for several centuries it constituted a potent principle of social and political
organization. Ultimately, however, the forces of cosmopolitanism and egalitarian-
ism in the region most closely identified with mercantile interests found them-
selves overly constrained by such a system.
As a result, Hodgson argues, a decentralized and flexible new international
society emerged in the Early Middle Period, with its own implicit balance of
social forces. This society, which Hodgson characterizes as the a'yan/amir
system, showed a remarkable openness and malleability. Several important
260 Edmund Burke, III
formative elements helped to secure this trend. One was the militarization of
agrarian authority, a process that began during the phase of caliphal absolutism.
Through the evolution of the institution of iqtd', a new group of largely Turkish
military rulers, the amirs, came into existence. The political structure of the
state and the extraction of agrarian revenues were decentralized into many
autonomous and quasi-autonomous units. The caliphate itself lapsed into
political irrelevance. Meanwhile, over and against the amirs another powerful
social force was emerging: the mercantile interests in the cities and the newly
prominent 'ulama', or more generally, the a'yan. Their strength derived from
the legitimacy that the 'ulama' incarnated as the chief interpreters of the shari'a
(whose dictates served to focus and organize the activities of the community)
as well as from the medial economic position of the merchants. During this
highly cosmopolitan phase of Islamic history, the cultural dialogue reached its
widest extent, and the interaction among the various strands that composed it
reached its greatest intensity. A final formative movement in this period was the
granting of droit de cite to the exponents of tariqah Sufism, and the crystallization
of the various turuq. This greatly increased the penetration of the faith into lower
social orders and aided the process of its diffusion abroad.
The Mongol catastrophe put an end to the international society of the Early
Middle Period and inaugurated a new phase of Islamic history: the age of Mongol
prestige. The Islamic successor states that emerged in the wake of the Mongol
conquest were powerfully influenced by the dynastic prestige of the conquerors.
Hodgson develops the concept of the military/patronage state as a means of
highlighting its characteristic social formation. The predominantly Turkish
elites who held sway during this period conceived of the state administration and
the army as extensions of the royal household. Following the Mongol example,
they were great benefactors of culture, founders of cities, and builders of archi-
tectural masterpieces. The influence of steppe institutions upon the social and
political life in the Nile-to-Oxus region reached its apex during this period.
As the sixteenth century began these states gave way to the more stable gun-
powder empires of early modern times, among which the Mughal, Safavi, and
Ottoman empires were the most important. The reassertion of the absolutist
tradition in the region, together with the continuance and further development
of many of the basic characteristics of the military patronage states, produced a
new age of Muslim greatness both political (where their achievements are evi-
dent) and intellectual; although clearly marked by the conservative spirit, Hodg-
son argues that these regimes were far from stagnant culturally, and that some
sectors experienced significant innovation.
Of course, the forces of change were already flowing in another direction.
With the advent of the age of Technicalism, human history entered a decisive
phase. In this section of the work, Hodgson focuses first on the origins of the
Western Transmutation, and then on its impact around the globe. European
economic and political dominance over the lands of Islam is followed in our
own century by the rise of nationalism and the emergence of nation states.
Islamic History as World History 26I
While the idea of technicalism constitutes a potent conceptual tool, the literature
upon which Hodgson draws in his treatment of the modern period is at least a
generation out of date. Given the meagre theoretical and empirical literature upon
which he draws, it is remarkable how well he does.30Book Six existed only in draft
form at Hodgson's death, and has been published substantially as it was. This is
unfortunate, as the weaknesses of Book Six mar one's overall impressions of The
Ventureof Islam, and certainly lessen its suitability as an undergraduate text. There
is a deeper cause for dissatisfaction with Book Six, to which Hodgson himself is
sensitive: by the modern period, the concept of Islamic civilization has lost
whatever utility it may once have had. The continuous cultural dialogue on
which he bases the concept was profoundly disrupted by the reassertion of
regional languages and traditions within the ecumene. Whatever international
elite culture may once have existed was seriously undermined by I8oo, such
that (for example) Moroccan Muslims could communicate only with difficulty
with their African or Indonesian coreligionists. In some ways it might have been
a neater conclusion to end the work with the dawning of the age of Technicalism.
But one can see why Hodgson was tempted to carry it up to the contemporary
period. This makes it all the more regrettable that he did not live to revise the
final sections of his manuscript.
For Hodgson, the unity of Islamic history was a function of the ongoing
dialogue of successive generations of Muslims with the formative ideals of
the civilization. Concretely, this meant a preoccupation with the elaboration
of Islamic doctrine and piety by the 'ulama', the corps of religious specialists
charged with maintaining the integrity and vitality of the faith. In this study
the concept of the shari'a looms as particularly important, since it provides
the foundation for Hodgson's interpretation. It shapes his treatment of the
Formative Period, provides the basic explanation of the operation of the
a'yan/amir system of the Middle Periods (where it reaches a kind of apotheosis),
and constitutes (with the concept of Sufism, on which more in a moment) the
guiding concept in explaining the unity of the later periods.
From the first pages of The Venture of Islam it is apparent that the term
'Shari'a' has a special importance for Hodgson: it serves to designate not only
Islamic law, but the central core of the civilization. The origins of the religious
impulses that gave rise to Islam, Hodgson traces to the ethical concerns of
Irano-Semitic prophetic monotheism. The working out of the egalitarian and
populistic implications of the original Qur'anic message provides the motive
30 For
example, virtually all of the literature on the social and economic history of
Turkey, Iran, and the Arab East has appeared since Book Six was written. While the
bibliography includes such classics as Albert Hourani's Arabic Thought in the Liberal
Age and Bernard Lewis's The Emergenceof Modern Turkey, it is unclear from reading
the text that Hodgson was able to make much use even of these works. Of theoretical
literature, such works as Barrington Moore, Jr.'s Social Origins of Dictatorship and
Democracy and Eric Wolf's Peasant Wars of the Twentieth Century, not to speak of the
entire critical literature on modernization theories, have appeared since Book Six was
written. There are worlds of thought and experience which separate the early I96os,
when this section was being written, from our own.
262 Edmund Burke, III
force of Islamic history. By the end of the Formative Period, a religious law
binding on all Muslims had crystallized in response to the egalitarian and
populistic concerns of the piety-minded. The shari'a provided Muslims with a
focus for self-realization: its social and legal patterns gradually penetrated
virtually all aspects of life, determining the organization of the community and
carving out an autonomous arena where the 'ulama' were supreme, over and
against the courtly culture of the Abbasids and their successors. The chapter in
Book Two on the shar'i Islamic vision is a brilliant, presentation of the process
by which the shari'a came into being. There and in the following chapter on
Muslim personal piety, Hodgson emphasizes the potency of the Qur'an and
of the image of the early Islamic community in providing an authoritative model
of the just society and a focal point for worship.
However convincingly presented, this analysis contains the seeds of those
same essentialist difficulties that Hodgson has rightly deplored in the work of
others. By the time that we reach the chapter 'Cultural Patterning in Islamdom
and the Occident,' where he presents an extended contrast between the two
civilizations in the thirteenth century, Hodgson presents the shari'a as nothing
less than the organizing principle of Islamic society. In a comparison between
Christianity and Islam as frameworks of religious life, he underscores the
contrast between a religion whose central theme is the demand for personal
responsiveness to redemptive love in an uncorrupted world with one whose
theme is the demand for personal responsibility for the moral ordering of the
natural world. He then traces the practical implications of each for the organiza-
tion of the social order and the elaboration of culture. Thus he emphasizes the
contractualism of Muslim civilization (the primacy of the rights of the individual
over the collective) against what he calls the hierarchical corporativism of the
medieval Occident: the a'yan/amir system contrasted with medieval feudalism,
the arabesque contrasted with the Gothic cathedral. Hodgson's argument is a
tour de force, but ultimately the level of abstraction at which it is pitched renders
it unconvincing.
Sufism is the other major concept in Hodgson's discussion of the unity of the
Islamic civilizational dialogue. Taken together, the sections on Sufism are one
of the best concise presentations of the development of Islamic mysticism, a
splendidly sensitive introduction to a complex and sprawling phenomenon. But
as contrasted with his careful distinctions in presenting the concept of the shari'a,
Hodgson's discussion of Sufism is informed by no such analytical power. He
defines Sufism as mysticism, but neither is ever adequately explained. Poly-
morphous and often profane, the variety of Sufism and its resistance to intellectu-
alizing elude Hodgson's categories. Only on the level of high love mysticism
(the Sufism of Bistami, Rumi, and al-Ghazali) can Hodgson bring to bear his
elaborate conceptual schemes and his 'science of compassion' in ways that in-
form and enlighten. Brief sections on how to read Sufi texts, and a sustained
meditation on a passage from Rumi's Masnavi, demonstrate the appeal and
cogency of this method. Against the Sufism of the popular turuq, saint cults, and
Islamic History as World History 263
curing practices, Hodgson is powerless. At this point, the limits of his cultural
elitism come out most sharply. In his scandalized attitude toward the corruption
and degeneracy of the popular brotherhoods, Hodgson brings to mind the puri-
tanical moralism of the reforming 'ulama' who are the chief heroes of The Venture
of Islam. Those who seek a sociological, rather than a merely logical, presentation
of the role of Sufism in shaping the fabric of Islamic societies should look
elsewhere.
CONCLUSION
cultural essentialism and thereby vitiate much of his achievement. While denying
that he is engaged in a search for the 'real Islam,' Hodgson's venture is one that
ultimately seeks to identify Islam with its formative ideals, and thus transposes
the search from the level of sect (e.g., Sunni vs. Shi'a) to that of the religion as a
whole. To the extent that it is possible to write a history of a civilization without
falling victim to the old mistakes, one can applaud Hodgson's effort. But to the
extent that historians are increasingly concerning themselves with the social and
economic history of Muslims, rather than with their 'civilization,' Hodgson's
venture appears as a splendid anachronism.
The Venture of Islam is both an original synthetic account of the civilization
of Islam whole and entire and a textbook for university undergraduates. It has
the virtues of both sorts of works: it is very teacherly in places (it offers advice
on how to understand Persian miniatures, Sufi writings, the forms of Muslim
piety, and the work of specific writers like Tabari, Rumi, and Ibn Khaldun
among others), and very scholarly and stimulating in others. By seeking to cover
the entire range of Islamic history, and to do so within a single narrative frame-
work, it has made a unique and important contribution to historical scholarship.
But there are some important defects in trying to do both things at once. Thus,
for example, The Venture of Islam is written on so abstract a level that it is diffi-
cult to teach to undergraduates. It also presumes far too much of students (or
even colleagues) in the way of background. It utilizes a complex and eccentric
language which is often distracting, such that Hodgson's thought often seems
overly dense and impenetrable. If in the end the work is successful both as text
and as scholarly synthesis (on balance I believe that it is), this is due to the high
level of the author's personal engagement, which tends to call forth a corres-
pondingly high-level engagement on the part of the reader.
The Venture of Islam challenges the reader on a variety of levels at once in the
manner of a Sufi tale. It is mentally and morally stretching both for rank begin-
ners (who miss the esoteric, abstract discussions) and more experienced readers
(who will find it full of stimulating insights, often wrong-headed obiter dicta,
and methodological encomia). I have found it endlessly fascinating and provoca-
tive: despite its many difficulties, The Venture of Islam deserves the widest
possible audience.