This chapter analyses the non-Muslim Islam of a Swedish academic, Professor Jan Hjärpe, who was the most prominent voice in the public sphere of Sweden from 1979 until the first years of the twenty-first century.While Hjärpe was always nuanced when writing about Islam, he produced – mainly as side-effect of choices – certain normalities and interpretations of Islam. I argue that these can be seen as expressions of non-Muslim Islam. This chapter is not a critique of Hjärpe’s writing, which has by and large stood the test of time, but a case-study aiming to discuss researchers’ awareness and control of the logical consequences of choices of words and topics. It addresses non-Muslim Islam as an often-unintended by-product of scholarly writing
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