Formulation of the Claim
Arkoun distinguishes between his method for studying Islam and classical Orientalism, which confines itself to compiling information.
Explanation
This distinction appears in Arkoun as a separation between two ways of looking at Islamic material: a descriptive method that accumulates data, and a method that seeks to question these data within the conditions and limits of their production. What is at stake is not merely a difference in details, but a difference in the very angle from which knowledge itself is viewed.
This distinction shows that Arkoun does not position himself as a direct continuation of that Orientalism; rather, he marks out a distance from it that opens the way for a more critical reading. Thus, for him, the issue becomes connected to the way knowledge is constructed, not to the mere increase of information alone.
Its Place in the Book’s Argument
This atom falls within Arkoun’s effort to reconsider the tools that have been used to study Islam, and to highlight the need for a method that does not stop at collecting material but examines the conditions that make it intelligible and open to critique. It is therefore close to his theses that distinguish between historical description and reflection on the limits of epistemic discourse itself.
Limits of the Claim
This claim should not be made to bear a comprehensive judgment on everything Orientalism has accomplished, nor should it be turned into an absolute rejection of all previous knowledge about Islam. The point here is to draw a methodological boundary between gathering information and Arkoun’s way of dealing with it critically.