Politicizing Islam : the Islamic revival in France and India / Z Fareen Parvez
Material type:
- 9780190842376
- 305.6970944 FAR-Z
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 300 | General Stack (For lending) | 305.6970944 FAR-Z (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 34316 |
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305.6945 AMB-B India and communism / | 305.6945092 NAR-R Madrasi memoir / | 305.6970 LOK-S Communal Violence, Forced Migration and the State : | 305.6970944 FAR-Z Politicizing Islam : | 305.6970954 MAH-A Polarised times : living in India today / | 305.697095414 BOS-N Recasting the region: language, culture and Islam in colonial Bangal / | 305.697095484 SHE-T Muslim belonging in secular India : |
Politicizing Islam explores Islamic revival movements in the French city of Lyon and its outer banlieues and the Indian city of Hyderabad, where Parvez conducted two years of ethnographic research, immersed in mosque communities, women's welfare centers, Islamic study circles, and philanthropic associations. The book provides an in-depth view of middle-class Muslims and elites, as well poor and subaltern Muslims in stigmatized neighborhoods, to show how Muslims make claims on the secular state and struggle to improve their lives as denigrated minorities. In Hyderabad, Muslim elites struggle for redistribution to the poor, who then use their patronage to practice autonomy from the state and build vibrant political communities. In Lyon, middle-class Muslims face widespread discrimination and negotiate with the state for religious recognition. But they remain estranged from Muslims in the banlieues who have embraced a sectarian form of Islam and retreated into the private sphere. Politicizing Islam explains how these diverse movements originated in either a flexible or militant secularism, and how Muslim class relations ultimately have consequences for debates within the Islamic tradition, the situations of Muslim women, and the potential for minority democratic participation.
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