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India’s Muslim communities, comprising almost one hundred and forty million people, have significant political, cultural, and religious identities in contemporary times. The processes of their emergence, formation, and the articulation of community identities, before and after independence, have been researched and interpreted in many ways by scholars.
This omnibus brings together three analytical frameworks — the empathetic view to identity formation, the regional articulation of identity, and developments at the national level. The book analyses several important aspects — the Deoband School, the Aligarh Movement, the Muslim League, the Lucknow Pact, the Lahore Declaration, Partition, the Shah Bano case, the demolition of Babri Masjid — providing a multifaceted and nuanced picture of the lives of India’s Muslims.
Barbara Daly Metcalf’s Islamic Revival in British India: Deoband 1860–1900 studies the vitality of Islam in late-nineteenth century north India by focusing on the most important Islamic seminary of the time. Metcalf explains that during the collapse of Muslim political power and colonial rule the ‘ulama ensured cultural continuity crucial to the emergence of modern Muslim identity.
Rafiuddin Ahmed in The Bengal Muslims 1871–1906 concentrates on the evolution of popular consciousness through an examination of the Bengali Muslim religious literature known as puthis. His study raises doubts about any simple explanation that emphasizes either the historical conflict between Hinduism and Islam, the doctrine of divide and rule, or the central role of constitutional initiatives.
In Legacy of a Divided Nation, Mushirul Hasan analyses India’s polity and its relationship with Muslims. He deliberates on the secular platform on which to build bridges in times when positions have hardened and battle lines drawn.
In his introduction to the omnibus, Mushirul Hasan locates these important studies in the extant literature and emphasizes the need to draw Islam in South Asia into the contemporary discourses on colonial and postcolonial writings. ISBN - 9780195691986
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