wow, haven't been on here for years and coincidentally i have been having similar thoughts.
part of the problem for me is that islam isn't a sola scriptura religion (excluding qur'anists!) so the only real secularism is french laicite. it is a living breathing tradition, that is, well, traditional... rather than an abstract faith, per se.
As a turk, i can say that didn't work very well did it? noone forgot the injustices of the military and their juntas, which despite the secularist veneer were generally geared towards brutal crackdown on the left and communists... and the islamists were of temporary use to the kemalist state, so they managed to get off comparitively (this is 1980s turkey after all) scott free.
And now, we have soft secularism (officially) but increasing islamisation and eurasian fascism. so where does that leave us? a return to high kemalism is so incredibly unlikely it's not even worth considering, + my kurdish heritage winces... and actually, the afrin olivebranch operation shows us that the kemalists are happy to line up with neo-ottomanist foreign policy...
I've been meaning to read this for a while. though sadly I think in the tradition of serious academia its going to be obstruse word salad over not very much at all — that antiproduction zeitgeist looms large!
https://press.princeton.edu/titles/10587.htmlBTW: is there an irc chat room or anything of the sort? could do with the company as my family's conservative turn becomes more pronounced — hajj is weird in that regard...