The Mohammed Arkoun Atlas is a map for reading his project from within its books, concepts, and trajectories. It traces how Arkoun asked about Islam in history: in the text, in reception, in the institution, and in the debate that determines what enters the field of thought and what remains outside it.
The atlas begins from a clear question: how did Arkoun read Islam within history? From there it approaches tradition and modernity, the Qur’an and reception, power and meaning, humanism, and the Critique of Islamic Reason, as sites where the question is at work rather than self-contained headings.
Where should I begin?
- If you are new to Arkoun, start with A First Start with Arkoun’s Questions.
- If you want to read a specific book, start with The Nine Books.
- If you are looking for an idea or term, start with The Governing Concepts or The Glossary.
- If you want to see the network of relations, open The Graph after choosing a book or concept as a starting point.
Reading entry points
- How Do You Read the Atlas? — a guide suited to four categories of readers
- About the Atlas — the nature of the project, its limits, and how it is reviewed
- Semantic Search and Retrieval — a search layer that links the question to nearby passages within the atlas
- Question-Based Reading Path Generator — turns a free-form question into a reading sequence within the atlas
- The Graph — a map of relations among books, concepts, and atoms
- Project Summary
- The Nine Books
- The Governing Concepts
- Reading Paths
- The Development of Arkoun’s Thought — how concepts emerged and changed across his books
- From Arkoun’s Statements — living evidence from his texts, arranged thematically
An example of the ascent of an idea
In Readings in the Qur’an, the idea of reading the text within history appears in multiple short passages. These passages gather into broader lines about discourse, reception, and codification, then extend into a wider argument about the critical reading of the Qur’an. From there, the book connects to the The Qur’an: Discourse, Reception, and Codification reading path and to the topic of The Historicity of Text and Discourse.
In this sense, the atlas works to show the path an idea takes: from a small place in a book, to a concept, and then to a broader question within the project.
Layers of the atlas
The atlas organizes its material into interconnected layers. These layers are not mandatory stages, but different entry points depending on the reader’s need:
| Layer | Meaning | When should I use it? |
|---|---|---|
| Books | Arkoun’s core entry points, with each book opening a different question. | When you want to read a specific work or compare one book to another. |
| Concepts | The governing words that recur across the books and connect them. | When you are looking for a tool such as historicity, the unthought, or humanism. |
| Paths | Reading routes that reorder the books according to meaning and question. | When you need a guided sequence instead of free browsing. |
| Major Themes | Broad fields that gather books and concepts around a single question. | When you begin from a general issue such as the Qur’an, power, or modernity. |
| Assemblages | Composite forms that gather atoms into semantic lines and coherent arguments. | When you want to understand a focal point within a book. |
| Structure | The broader framework within which the book or idea is organized. | When you want to see the logic of the argument, not only its details. |
| Atoms | The smallest units that carry fine detail and feed meaning upward into higher levels. | When you are looking for a precise point or a partial piece of evidence. |
The atlas holds the thread of reading in Arkoun’s work: from question to book, from book to concept, and from concept to the site where meaning opens up or limits in thought are revealed.