This biographical article is written
like a résumé. (May 2024) |
Craig Michael Considine | |
---|---|
Born | 1985 or 1986 (age 37–38)
[1]
Needham, Massachusetts, United States |
Citizenship | American |
Alma mater |
Trinity College Dublin (PhD)
Royal Holloway, University of London (MSc) American University (BA) |
Occupation(s) | Christian commentator, scholar and author on Islam |
Website | https://drcraigconsidine.com |
Craig Michael Considine is an American sociologist, an author, and a senior lecturer in sociology at Rice University. [1] Considine has written books on Christian-Muslim relations.
Considine is an American of English, Scottish, Irish and Italian descent. [2] [3]
He attended high school in Needham, Massachusetts. [4] He later attended Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, graduating in 2015 with a PhD in sociology. [1] His PhD thesis focused on young Pakistani men in Dublin and Boston. [5] This thesis formed the basis of his 2017 book on the same topic. [6]
Considine is a senior lecturer in the Department of Sociology at Rice University. [1] In 2020, he received an internal teaching award from the university. [7]
In 2021, Considine published a book concerning the Prophet Muhammad's relationship to Christianity. [8] Samuel Sweeney reviewed the book in The Wall Street Journal, [9] stressing that "Considine misunderstands the role of ’asabiyya as Ibn Khaldun meant it", summarising the book as making "dubious claims about ideas that emerge from Islamic history", and suggesting that "It is hard to imagine a more pained attempt to project modern values onto a medieval concept". Charles Tieszen provided a similarly negative review of the book in the journal of Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations. [10] Tieszen stated that "readers who hope to use the book as a scholarly overview, whether for historical scholarship or in the classroom, will be inevitably dissatisfied and perhaps even at times disappointed", and describing the book as "not a scholarly engagement" but instead a text that "neglects historiography and literary contextualization". [10] Tieszen noted that Considine is "keen to contextualize and problematize qur’anic passages when it suits him but is entirely uninterested in doing so with other sources when such analysis could weaken or obscure his argument". [10]
Considine directed "Journey into America", an amateur documentary following Akbar Ahmed and a group of young researchers addressing Muslim experiences in America. [11] Neither Rotten Tomatoes nor IMDb records any reviews by professional critics or audience members. [12] [11] A review in Anthropology Today described the documentary as "a combination of morality tale and road movie", summarizing that it is "intricately composed" although "inconveniently long". [13] The only platform where the documentary is available is YouTube where, as of June 2024, it has received 3,800 views. [14]
This biographical article is written
like a résumé. (May 2024) |
Craig Michael Considine | |
---|---|
Born | 1985 or 1986 (age 37–38)
[1]
Needham, Massachusetts, United States |
Citizenship | American |
Alma mater |
Trinity College Dublin (PhD)
Royal Holloway, University of London (MSc) American University (BA) |
Occupation(s) | Christian commentator, scholar and author on Islam |
Website | https://drcraigconsidine.com |
Craig Michael Considine is an American sociologist, an author, and a senior lecturer in sociology at Rice University. [1] Considine has written books on Christian-Muslim relations.
Considine is an American of English, Scottish, Irish and Italian descent. [2] [3]
He attended high school in Needham, Massachusetts. [4] He later attended Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, graduating in 2015 with a PhD in sociology. [1] His PhD thesis focused on young Pakistani men in Dublin and Boston. [5] This thesis formed the basis of his 2017 book on the same topic. [6]
Considine is a senior lecturer in the Department of Sociology at Rice University. [1] In 2020, he received an internal teaching award from the university. [7]
In 2021, Considine published a book concerning the Prophet Muhammad's relationship to Christianity. [8] Samuel Sweeney reviewed the book in The Wall Street Journal, [9] stressing that "Considine misunderstands the role of ’asabiyya as Ibn Khaldun meant it", summarising the book as making "dubious claims about ideas that emerge from Islamic history", and suggesting that "It is hard to imagine a more pained attempt to project modern values onto a medieval concept". Charles Tieszen provided a similarly negative review of the book in the journal of Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations. [10] Tieszen stated that "readers who hope to use the book as a scholarly overview, whether for historical scholarship or in the classroom, will be inevitably dissatisfied and perhaps even at times disappointed", and describing the book as "not a scholarly engagement" but instead a text that "neglects historiography and literary contextualization". [10] Tieszen noted that Considine is "keen to contextualize and problematize qur’anic passages when it suits him but is entirely uninterested in doing so with other sources when such analysis could weaken or obscure his argument". [10]
Considine directed "Journey into America", an amateur documentary following Akbar Ahmed and a group of young researchers addressing Muslim experiences in America. [11] Neither Rotten Tomatoes nor IMDb records any reviews by professional critics or audience members. [12] [11] A review in Anthropology Today described the documentary as "a combination of morality tale and road movie", summarizing that it is "intricately composed" although "inconveniently long". [13] The only platform where the documentary is available is YouTube where, as of June 2024, it has received 3,800 views. [14]