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International Journal of History

2025, Vol. 7, Issue 4, Part A

Histories without Clocks: Islamic temporality and the postcolonial condition


Author(s): Artal Omar

Abstract: This paper interrogates the multifaceted conception of temporality in Arab-Muslim societies, tracing its theological, linguistic, and philosophical articulations from classical Islamic thought to postcolonial modernity. Engaging with temporality as a culturally contingent category, it reveals how Arab-Islamic traditions juxtapose divine eternity with human historicity, privileging aspectual temporality over linear progression. The study emphasizes the enduring significance of the Ummah as a temporally fluid communal identity, contrasted with the modern territorial nation. By drawing on linguistic structures, ethical time constructs, and historiographical practices, the paper situates Islamic temporality as both a moral category and a resistant epistemology to Eurocentric temporalities. Ultimately, it posits temporality as a critical site of negotiation between heritage and modernity, highlighting the dynamic interplay between sacred cyclicality and political linearity in shaping collective memory and national identity. This synthesis advances a situated universalism that challenges the homogenizing logics of modern nationhood.

DOI: 10.22271/27069109.2025.v7.i4a.385

Pages: 05-07 | Views: 112 | Downloads: 49

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International Journal of History
How to cite this article:
Artal Omar. Histories without Clocks: Islamic temporality and the postcolonial condition. Int J Hist 2025;7(4):05-07. DOI: 10.22271/27069109.2025.v7.i4a.385
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