Abstract
Heba Raouf Ezzat calls for overcoming the controversy between supporters and opponents of Islamization of Knowledge, attempting to depart from the Western social theory cycle by providing an Islamic perspective that is able to provide an analytical framework that interprets social and political phenomena in more depth. Her study examines the political function that family plays in change – in a broad sense – that favors restoring the “Islamicity” of society and state. It captures the position of the Western perception of the family, its political function, and the paradox of society and the state in the West. Ezzat’s study presents the Islamic position of the political responsibility of the family, focusing on the function of the family in political change, both social and cultural, and concludes with a discussion of the Palestinian Intifada as a pioneering cultural experience.
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