The atlas begins with nine books, then opens multiple ways to return to them. The reader starts from a book, a passage, or a short phrase, then sees how this material connects to a broader concept, path, or theme. For this reason, the books, concepts, paths, themes, assemblages, structure, and atoms stand side by side as different ways of returning to the texts and following their questions.

This page offers a quick entry into the atlas: where the reader begins, how one moves between the books, and where the major questions gather and return in different forms in more than one place.

The Nine Books

How the Layers Connect

  • Atoms: capture the precise phrases and small details in each book.
  • Assemblages: gather atoms into clearer threads, showing how meaning takes shape across nearby passages.
  • Structure: organizes assemblages within the broader argument at work in the book or section.
  • Paths: connect parts of the same book and open transitions from one book to another when a question recurs or shifts location.
  • Themes: collect what returns across the books in major issues such as the Qur’an, fundamentalism, modernity, humanism, and comparison among religions.
  • Concepts: provide keys for reading religion, history, power, and meaning in Arkoun, while paying attention to the context in which each concept appears.

In this arrangement, the reader finds a path from the small phrase to the broader question, then returns from the question to the text that carried it. Atoms do not remain isolated evidence, and structure does not become a general judgment detached from the books.

Where the Reader Begins

If a clear entry point is needed, these are three practical gateways within the atlas:

Major Themes