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Islam in South Asia: Critical Concepts in Islamic Studies

Editat de DAVID TAYLOR
en Limba Engleză Hardback – sep 2010
There are more Muslims ߝ over 400 million ߝ in South Asia than in any other region in the world. Many of the most important political, intellectual and spiritual developments within Islam have had their origins, or have flourished, in the area, and Muslims from the region have played important roles in the global history of Islam. Pakistan was specifically created to provide a homeland for South Asia’s Muslim population, and its trials and tribulations over the past 60 years have been carefully watched by Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Muslims constitute India’s largest minority, with an often uneasy relationship to the majority.
The early history of Islam in South Asia, including migration, conversion and Muslim dynasties, as well as religious developments, are studied in depth, as is the role of Islam in the colonial period, including resistance to colonial rule, and intellectual responses to, and dialogue with, Western thought. Articles also cover Islam since independence, including political movements, Muslims as majorities and minorities, and the South Asian Muslim diaspora. In addition, Islam and development, including material related to women and Islam, legal reform, Islamic finance, and education issues, are all areas that Islam in South Asia considers.
During the last hundred years there has been extensive English-language writing and research on Islam in South Asia, both by Muslim scholars and by non-Muslims. This new Major Work from Routledge brings together the most significant and enduring work, most of it published in the past thirty years, but with occasional use of older material. Islam in South Asia, with a comprehensive introduction, newly written by the editor to place the collected material in its historical and intellectual context, is destined to be an essential work of reference.
Available now at a special introductory price. This price is applicable until 3 months after publication. For more information, please contact us (reference@routledge.com).
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780415552950
ISBN-10: 0415552958
Pagini: 4
Dimensiuni: 163 x 241 x 112 mm
Greutate: 2.96 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Routledge
Seria Critical Concepts in Islamic Studies


Cuprins

DRAFT CONTENTS
Volume I: South Asian Islam in historical and cultural context
1. Peter Hardy, ‘Modern European and Muslim Explanations of Conversion to Islam in South Asia: A Preliminary Survey of the Literature’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1977, 2, 177ߝ206.
2. Richard Eaton, ‘Sufi Folk Literature and the Expansion of Indian Islam’, History of Religions, 1974, 14, 2, 117ߝ27.
3. Raziuddin Aquil, ‘Hazrat-i-Dehli: The Making of the Chishti Sufi Centre and the Stronghold of Islam’, South Asia Research, 2008, 28, 1, 23ߝ48.
4. Nile Green, ‘Emerging Approaches to the Sufi Traditions of South Asia: Between Texts, Territories and the Transcendent’, South Asia Research, 2004, 24, 2, 123ߝ48.
5. Carl Ernst, ‘From Hagiography to Martyrology: Conflicting Testimonies to a Sufi Martyr of the Delhi Sultanate’, History of Religions, 1985, 24, 4, 308ߝ27.
6. William Chittick, ‘Notes on Ibn Al-‘Arabi’s Influence in the Subcontinent’, The Muslim World, 1992, 82, 3/4, 218ߝ41.
7. Imtiaz Ahmad, ‘Introduction’, Caste and Social Stratification Among Muslims in India (Manohar, 1978), pp. 1ߝ17.
8. Mattison Mines, ‘Muslim Social Stratification in India: The Basis for Variation’, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, 1972, 28, 4, 333ߝ49.
9. Ali S. Asani, ‘The Khojahs of South Asia: Defining a Space of their Own’, Cultural Dynamics, 2001, 13, 2, 155ߝ68.
10. Rehana Ghadially, ‘Women’s Observances in the Calendrical Rites of the Daudi Bohra Isma’ili Sect of South Asian Muslims’, Islamic Culture, 2003, 78, 3, 1ߝ20.
11. Simon Digby, ‘The Sufi Shaykh and the Sultan: A Conflict of Claims to Authority in Medieval India’, Iran, 1990, 28, 71ߝ81.
12. Jurgen Wasim Frembgen, ‘Divine Madness and Cultural Otherness: Diwanas and Faqirs in Northern Pakistan’, South Asia Research, 2006, 26, 3, 235ߝ48.
13. Paula Richman, ‘Veneration of the Prophet Muhammad in an Islamic Pillaittamil’, Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1993, 113, 1, 57ߝ74.
14. Regula Burckhardt Qureshi, ‘Exploring Time Cross-Culturally: Ideology and Performance in the Sufi Qawwali’, Journal of Musicology, 1994, 12, 4, 491ߝ528.
15. Richard Eaton, ‘Indo-Muslim Traditions, 1200ߝ1750: Towards a Framework of Study’, South Asia Research, 2002, 22, 1, 1ߝ19.
16. Ali Anooshahr, ‘Mughal Historians and the Memory of the Islamic Conquest of India’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, 2006, 43, 3, 275ߝ300.
17. Muzaffar Alam and Sanjay Subrahmanyam, ‘Envisioning Power: The Political Thought of a Late Eighteenth-Century Mughal Prince’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, 2006, 43, 2, 131ߝ61.
18. Jamal Malik, ‘Muslim Culture and Reform in 18th-Century South Asia’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 2003, 13, 2, 227ߝ43.
19. Barbara Metcalf, ‘Too Little and Too Much: Reflections on Muslims in the History of India’, Journal of Asian Studies, 1995, 54, 4, 951ߝ67.
Volume II: Reform and resistance during the colonial period
20. Francis Robinson, ‘Religious Change and the Self in Muslim South Asia Since 1800’, South Asia, 1999, 22, 13ߝ27.
21. Asim Roy, ‘Impact of Islamic Revival and Reform in Colonial Bengal and Bengal Muslim Identity’, South Asia, 1999, 22, 39ߝ77.
22. S. Irfan Habib, ‘Reconciling Science with Islam in 19th-Century India’, Contributions to Indian Sociology, 2000, 34, 1, 63ߝ92.
23. Aziz Ahmad, ‘Sayyid Ahmad Khan, Jamal al-Din al-Afghani and Muslim India’, Studia Islamica, 1960, 13, 55ߝ78.
24. David Lelyveld, ‘Disenchantment at Aligarh: Islam and the Realm of the Secular in Late Nineteenth-Century India’, Die Welt des Islams, 1982, 22, 85ߝ102.
25. Barbara Metcalf, ‘The Madrasa at Deoband: A Model for Religious Education in Modern India’, Modern Asian Studies, 1978, 12, 1, 111ߝ34.
26. Sana Haroon, ‘The Rise of Deobandi Islam in the North-West Frontier Province and its Implications in Colonial India and Pakistan 1914ߝ1996’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 2008, 18, 1, 47ߝ70.
27. Javed Majeed, ‘Putting God in His Place: Bradley, McTaggart, and Muhammad Iqbal’, Journal of Islamic Studies, 1993, 4, 2, 208ߝ36.
28. Syed Akbar Hyder, ‘Iqbal and Karbala: Re-Reading the Episteme of Martyrdom for a Poetics of Appropriation’, Cultural Dynamics, 2001, 13, 3, 339ߝ62.
29. Annemarie Schimmel, ‘The Idea of Prayer in the Thought of Iqbal’, The Muslim World, 1958, 48, 3, 205ߝ22.
30. A. J. Halepota, ‘Shah Waliyullah and Iqbal, the Philosophers of Modern Age’, Islamic Studies, 1974, 13, 4, 225ߝ34.
31. Ayesha Jalal, ‘Striking a Just Balance: Maulana Azad as a Theorist of Trans-National Jihad’, Modern Intellectual History, 2007, 4, 1, 95ߝ107.
32. Ian H. Douglas, ‘Abul Kalam Azad and Pakistan: A Post-Bangladesh Reconsideration of an Indian Muslim’s Opposition to Pakistan’, Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 1972, 40, 4, 458ߝ79.
33. Stephen F. Dale, ‘The Islamic Frontier in Southwest India: The Shahid as a Cultural Ideal among the Mappillas of Malabar’, Modern Asian Studies, 1977, 11, 1, 41ߝ55.
34. Paul Dimeo, ‘"With Political Pakistan in the Offing …": Football and Communal Politics in South Asia, 1887ߝ1947’, Journal of Contemporary History, 2003, 38, 3, 377ߝ94.
35. David Gilmartin, ‘Religious Leadership and the Pakistan Movement in the Punjab’, Modern Asian Studies, 1979, 13, 3, 485ߝ517.
36. Nile Green, ‘Moral Competition and the Thrill of the Spectacular: Recounting Catastrophe in Colonial Bombay’, South Asia Research, 2008, 28, 3, 239ߝ51.
37. Shabnum Tejani, ‘Re-considering Chronologies of Nationalism and Communalism: The Khilafat Movement in Sind and its Aftermath, 1919ߝ1927’, South Asia Research, 2007, 27, 3, 249ߝ69.
Volume III: Islam and politics in contemporary South Asia
38. Richard Kurin, ‘Islamization in Pakistan: A View from the Countryside’, Asian Survey, 1985, 25, 8, 852ߝ62.
39. Tahir Kamran, ‘Contextualising Sectarian Militancy in Pakistan: The Case of Jhang’, Journal of Islamic Studies, 2009, 20, 1, 55ߝ85.
40. Riaz Hassan, ‘Religion, Society, and the State in Pakistan: Pirs and Politics’, Asian Survey, 1987, 27, 5, 552ߝ65.
41. Masooda Bano, ‘Beyond Politics: The Reality of a Deobandi Madrasa in Pakistan’, Journal of Islamic Studies, 2007, 18, 1, 43ߝ68.
42. S. V. R. Nasr, ‘The Rise of Sunni Militancy in Pakistan: The Changing Role of Islamism and the Ulama in Society and Politics’, Modern Asian Studies, 2000, 34, 1, 139ߝ80.
43. Muhammad Qasim Zaman, ‘Commentaries, Print and Patronage: "Hadith" and the Madrasas in Modern South Asia’, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 1999, 62, 1, 60ߝ81.
44. Jan-Peter Hartung, ‘Affection and Aversion: Ambivalences among Muslim Intellectual Elites in Contemporary South Asia’, South Asia Research, 2001, 21, 2, 189ߝ202.
45. Marc Gaborieau, ‘A Peaceful Jihad? South Asian Muslim Proselytism as Seen by Ahmadiyya, Tablighi Jama’at and Jama’at -i Islami’, Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam, 2007, 33, 467ߝ86.
46. Barbara Metcalf, ‘Travelers’ Tales in the Tablighi Jama’at’, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2003, 588, 136ߝ48.
47. Magnus Marsden, ‘Islam, Political Authority and Emotion in Northern Pakistan’, Contributions to Indian Sociology, 2007, 41, 1, 41ߝ80.
48. Imtiaz Hussain, ‘Fundamentalism and Bangladesh: No Error, No Terror’, South Asian Survey, 2007, 14, 2, 207ߝ29.
49. Sreeradha Datta, ‘Islamic Militancy in Bangladesh: The Threat from Within’, South Asia, 2007, 30, 1, 145ߝ70.
50. Anwar Alam, ‘Political Management of Islamic Fundamentalism: A View from India’, Ethnicities, 2007, 7, 1, 30ߝ60.
51. Yoginder Sikand, ‘A New Indian Muslim Agenda: The Dalit Muslims and the All-India Backward Muslim Morcha’, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 2001, 21, 2, 287ߝ96.
52. Rizwan A. Ahmad, ‘The State and National Foundation in the Maldives’, Cultural Dynamics, 2001, 13, 3, 293ߝ315.
Volume IV
53. Feisal Khan, ‘Islamic Banking by Judiciary: The "Backdoor" for Islamism in Pakistan’, South Asia, 2008, 31, 3, 535ߝ55.
54. Lucy Carroll, ‘Orphaned Grandchildren in Islamic Law of Succession: Reform and Islamization in Pakistan’, Islamic Law and Society, 1998, 5, 3, 409ߝ47.
55. Gregory C. Kozlowski, ‘Loyalty, Locality and Authority in Several Opinions (Fatawa) Delivered by the Mufti of the Jami’ah Nizamiyyah Madrasah, Hyderabad, India’, Modern Asian Studies, 1995, 29, 4, 893ߝ927.
56. Srimati Basu, ‘Shading the Secular: Law at Work in the Indian Higher Courts’, Cultural Dynamics, 2003, 15, 2, 131ߝ52.
57. Gail Minault, ‘Sayyid Mumtaz Ali and "Huquq un-Niswan": An Advocate of Women’s Rights in Islam in the Late Nineteenth Century’, Modern Asian Studies, 1990, 24, 1, 147ߝ72.
58. Ruby Lall, ‘Gender and Sharafat: Re-Reading Nazir Ahmad’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 2008, 18, 1, 15ߝ30.
59. Anita Weiss, ‘Interpreting Islam and Women’s Rights: Implementing CEDAW in Pakistan’, International Sociology, 2003, 18, 3, 581ߝ601.
60. Bruce B. Lawrence, ‘Woman as Subject/Woman as Symbol: Islamic Fundamentalism and the Status of Women’, Journal of Religious Ethics, 1994, 22, 1, 163ߝ85.
61. Nazish Brohi, ‘At the Altar of Subalternity: The Quest for Muslim Women in the War on Terror—Pakistan After 9/11’, Cultural Dynamics, 2008, 20, 2, 133ߝ47.
62. Aneela Babar, ‘New "Social Imaginaries": The Al-Huda Phenomenon’, South Asia, 2008, 31, 2, 348ߝ63.
63. Shahnaz Huda, ‘Dowry in Bangladesh: Compromizing Women’s Rights’, South Asia Research, 2006, 26, 3, 249ߝ68.
64. Farzana Haniffa, ‘Piety as Politics Amongst Muslim Women in Contemporary Sri Lanka’, Modern Asian Studies, 2008, 42, 2/3, 347ߝ75.
65. Farhana Ibrahim, ‘Islamic "Reform", the Nation-State and the Liberal Subject: The Cultural Politics of Identity in Kachchh, Gujarat’, Contributions to Indian Sociology, 2008, 42, 2, 191ߝ217.
66. Nazli Kibria, ‘Muslim Encounters in the Global Economy: Identity Developments of Labor Migrants from Bangladesh to the Middle East’, Ethnicities, 2008, 8, 4, 518ߝ35.
67. C. Y. Thangarajah, ‘Veiled Constructions: Conflict, Migration and Modernity in Eastern Sri Lanka’, Contributions to Indian Sociology, 2003, 37, 1/2, 141ߝ62.
68. Edward Simpson, ‘Migration and Islamic Reform in a Port Town of Western India’, Contributions to Indian Sociology, 2003, 37, 1/2, 83ߝ108.
69. Seema Alavi, ‘Unani Medicine in the Nineteenth-Century Public Sphere: Urdu Texts and the Oudh Akhbar’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, 2005, 42, 1, 101ߝ29.
70. Helen E. Sheehan and S. J. Hussain, ‘Unani Tibb: History, Theory and Contemporary Practice in South Asia’, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 2003, 583, 122ߝ35.
71. Matthew Nelson, ‘Muslims, Markets, and the Meaning of a "Good" Education in Pakistan’, Asian Survey, 2006, 46, 5, 699ߝ720.
72. Usha Sanyal, ‘Generational Changes in the Ahl-e Sunnat Movement in North India during the Twentieth Century’, Modern Asian Studies, 1998, 32, 3, 635ߝ56.
73. Peter Bertocci, ‘A Sufi Movement in Bangladesh: The Maijbhandhari Tariqa and its Followers’, Contributions to Indian Sociology, 2006, 40, 1, 1ߝ28.