Formulation of the Claim
The ability of social groups to speak about themselves is a modern phenomenon.
Explanation
Arkoun links the emergence of self-expression by groups to a historical transformation in the conditions of expression and knowledge, not merely to the possession of a voice or an opinion. What is meant is that groups were not always able to represent themselves within the public sphere as both object and agent at once.
This idea serves to show that speaking about the self is not a fixed natural given, but the result of a modern formation of relations of representation, consciousness, and critique. For this reason, Arkoun sees this capacity as a sign of historical openness, not as a trait inherent to every society in every time.
Its Place in the Book’s Argument
This atom falls within Arkoun’s concern with rethinking the conditions for the emergence of the social and intellectual subject within modern Islamic history. It is directly connected to his questions about humanism, the transformation of discourse, and who has the right to speak in the name of the group or within it.
This idea also helps explain his critique of structures that obscure social voices or confine them to ready-made forms of representation. The issue here is not simply a description of a contemporary reality, but part of a broader thesis about modernity as a transformation in the possibilities of speech and self-awareness.
Limits of the Claim
This claim does not mean that groups were completely silent in earlier periods, nor that it is a general judgment on all societies in the same way. What is intended is a historical description of the rise of a new form of self-expression under modern conditions.