Muslim culture in the global dimension is not a monolithic entity but a complex, polycentric, and dynamic system that arises at the intersection of universal religious prescriptions of Islam and local historical and cultural traditions. It forms as a "tafsir" (interpretation) of basic Islamic values through the means of various civilizations — Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Malay, African, Indian, and, in recent decades, Western. A scientific analysis of this culture requires distinguishing between normative Islam (doctrine, Sharia) and Islamic culture as a historically changing complex of practices, artifacts, and meanings created by Muslim communities around the world. Its global influence is exerted through demographics, economy, politics, art, and intellectual discourses.
The modern Muslim world is not only countries with Muslim majorities (the OIC counts 57 states) but also significant diaspora communities in Western and Asian countries. With a population of about 1.9 billion people (about 25% of the world's population), Islam is the second-largest religion. However, its cultural influence is nonlinearly dependent on demographics. Several models can be identified:
Muslim majority culture (Middle East, North Africa, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia, etc.): Here, Islamic norms are deeply integrated into the legal system, education, social etiquette, and public space. Culture often has an officially sanctioned character.
Muslim minority culture in non-Muslim countries (India, China, Europe, USA): Here, Muslim culture exists in a mode of dialogue, adaptation, and sometimes conflict with the dominant culture. It often focuses on issues of identity, minority rights, and hybridization (for example, British Asian music "bhangra," Islamic fashion in Paris).
Interesting fact: Indonesia, the country with the largest Muslim population in the world (over 230 million), represents a unique example of syncretic Islamic culture "Nusantara," where Islam is organically blended with pre-Islamic animistic, Indo-Buddhist traditions, and local customary law (adat). This refutes the stereotype of the monolithic nature of Muslim culture.
1. Language and Literature
Arabic language as the language of the Koran remains a sacred and unifying factor for all Muslims, regardless of their native language. Its influence on Persian, Urdu, Turkish, Swahili, Malay, and even Spanish (through the Mauritanian heritage) is enormous.
Literary genres: Classical poetry (Persian Sufi poetry of Rumi and Hafiz, Arabic muallakat), philosophical prose (Ibn Sina/Avicenna, Ibn Rushd/Averroes), compilations of didactic stories ("One Thousand and One Nights") have become part of the global literary canon and continue to influence contemporary writers.
2. Visual Art and Architecture
The principle of an-ikonism (avoidance of depicting living beings in a religious context) led to the flourishing of:
Arabesques and geometric patterns: These complex, endless motifs symbolizing transcendence and the unity of God have become the hallmark of Islamic art from the Alhambra in Spain to the Taj Mahal in India and modern architectural projects.
Calligraphy: The elevated status of writing Koran verses ("hufya") as a religious act and an aesthetic object.
Architecture: The dome, minaret, iwan, inner courtyard (sahan) — these elements, adapting to local styles, have formed a recognizable global architectural landscape.
3. Science and Philosophy
During the Abbasid "Golden Age" (8th–13th centuries), Muslim scholars were the main custodians and developers of the ancient heritage. Their translations and comments on the works of Aristotle, Plato, Galen, as well as their own discoveries in algebra (al-Khwarizmi), optics (Ibn al-Haytham), medicine (Ibn Sina), chemistry (Jabir ibn Hayyan) laid the foundation for the European Renaissance and the scientific method.
4. Modern Mass Culture and Media
Cinema: Iranian author cinema (A. Kiarostami, M. Mahmahlbaф) has gained worldwide recognition. Bollywood and Turkish TV series ("The Magnificent Century"), consumed by millions in Asia, Africa, and Eastern Europe, transmit hybrid cultural models where Islamic values are combined with modern plots.
Fashion: A global market for "modest fashion" (modest fashion) has emerged, valued at hundreds of billions of dollars. It is not just religious clothing but an industry shaping aesthetics and identity for Muslim women and non-Muslims around the world.
Digital sphere: Islamic fintech applications (halal banking), online learning platforms (Quranic), social networks for Muslims are developing.
5. Gastronomy
Muslim peoples' cuisines (Maghribi, Levantine, Persian, Central Asian, Malay) with their common principles (halal, generous use of spices, certain prohibitions) have become an integral part of the global culinary landscape. Kebab, hummus, falafel, pilaf, baklava are known worldwide.
Muslim culture in the global context faces serious challenges:
Internal pluralism and conflicts: Debates about "authenticity" and the right to voice continue between various trends (Sunni, Shi'a, Sufi), between conservative and liberal interpretations, between Arabocentrism and peripheral cultures (such as African Islam).
Globalization and Westernization: Processes of modernization and the influence of Western mass culture create tension between tradition and modernity, giving rise to both fundamentalist reactions and creative forms of synthesis.
Islamophobia and politicization: In the Western discourse, Islamic culture is often reduced to security issues, women's rights, and terrorism, making it difficult to perceive it as a rich and diverse civilization system.
Muslim culture in the global context is not a static heritage but a living, pulsating process of constant reinterpretation and adaptation. It demonstrates an amazing ability to preserve a consistent core of identity (tauhid — monotheism, adherence to the Koran and Sunna) while its cultural expression is infinitely diverse — from Moroccan zawiyas to Indonesian nasheed songs, from calligraphy in mosques to the design of hijabs on Instagram.
Its global influence today is not through conquests, as in earlier periods, but through demographic presence, economic networks, cultural exports, and intellectual dialogue. Understanding this culture requires the rejection of essentialist views and the recognition of its internal complexity, dynamics, and ability to be a significant actor in shaping a multipolar world in the 21st century, where it acts as both a guardian of tradition, a participant in modernization, and an author of new hybrid forms. This is a culture that constantly reminds the world of its presence not as a "problem" but as a polyphonic and full-fledged interlocutor in the global dialogue of civilizations.
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