AUTHOR APPROVED Established in London in 2002, the Aga Khan University, Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations aims to strengthen research and teaching about the heritages of Muslim societies as they have evolved over time, and to examine the challenges these societies face in today's globalised world. It also seeks to create opportunities for interaction among academics, traditionally trained scholars, innovative thinkers and leaders, in an effort to promote dialogue and build bridges. Exploring Muslim Contexts Series Editor: Abdou Filali-Ansary This series seeks to address salient…mehr
AUTHOR APPROVED Established in London in 2002, the Aga Khan University, Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations aims to strengthen research and teaching about the heritages of Muslim societies as they have evolved over time, and to examine the challenges these societies face in today's globalised world. It also seeks to create opportunities for interaction among academics, traditionally trained scholars, innovative thinkers and leaders, in an effort to promote dialogue and build bridges. Exploring Muslim Contexts Series Editor: Abdou Filali-Ansary This series seeks to address salient and urgent issues faced by Muslim societies as they evolve in a rapidly globalising world. It brings together the scholarship of leading specialists from various academic fields, representing a wide range of theoretical and practical perspectives. Cosmpolitanisms in Muslim Contexts Perspectives from the Past Edited by Derryl N. MacLean and Sikeena Karmali Ahmed '/Cosmopolitanisms in Muslim Contexts/ exceeds all previous efforts to address the intersection of Islam and cosmopolitan norms, values and options. Against the backdrop of Islamicate civilization and contemporary global challenges, its contributors accent cosmopolitanism as both a political ideal and a social practice in several contexts. At last one can, and does, grasp the critical cosmopolitan element of the Muslim world throughout the Afro-Eurasian ecumene.' Bruce B. Lawrence, Marcus Family Professor of Humanities and Professor of Islamic Studies Emeritus, Duke University Cosmopolitanism has become a key concept in social and political thought, standing in opposition to ideologies such as nationalism, parochialism, and fundamentalism. Much recent discussion of this concept has been situated within contemporary Western self-perceptions, with little inclusion of information from historical Muslim contexts. This volume redresses the balance by focusing attention on instances in modern world history where cosmopolitan ideas and practices pervaded specific Muslim societies and cultures. Derryl N. MacLean is Director of the Centre for the Comparative Study of Muslim Societies and Cultures and Associate Professor in the Department of History at Simon Fraser University, Canada. Sikeena Karmali Ahmed is Manager of Publications at the Aga Khan University, Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Derryl N. MacLean is Director of the Centre for the Comparative Study of Muslim Societies and Cultures, and Associate Professor in the Department of History at Simon Fraser University, Canada. He is author of Religion and Society in Arab Sind (Brill, 1989). Sikeena Karmali Ahmed is the Manager of Publications at The Aga Khan University Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilizations. She is the author of a collection of poetry, Places to Remember, and an award-winning novel entitled A House by the Sea.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: Cosmopolitanisms in Muslim Contexts Derryl N. MacLean; 2. Freeborn Villagers: Islam and the Local Uses of Cosmopolitan Connections in the Tanzanian Countryside Felicitas Becker; 3. Interrogating 'Cosmopolitanism' in an Indian Ocean Setting: Thinking Through Mombasa on the Swahili Coast Kai Kresse; 4. Translators of Empire: Colonial Cosmopolitanism Ottoman Bureaucrats and the Struggle over the Governance of Yemen 1898-1914 Thomas Kuehn; 5. Islampolis Cosmopolis: Ottoman Urbanity Between Myth Memory and Postmodernity Ariel Salzmann; 6. Cosmopolitan Cursing in Late-Nineteenth Century Alexandria Will Hanley; 7. Kebabs and Port Wine: The Culinary Cosmopolitanism of Anglo-Persian Dining 1800-1835 Nile Green; 8. Abdur Rahman Chughtai: Cosmopolitan Mughal Aesthetic in the Age of Print Iftikhar Dadi; 9. Cosmopolitanism and Authenticity: The Doctrine of Tashabbuh Bi'l-Kuffar ('Imitating the Infidel') in Modern South Asian Fatwas Muhammad Khalid Masud; About the Contributors.
1. Introduction: Cosmopolitanisms in Muslim Contexts Derryl N. MacLean; 2. Freeborn Villagers: Islam and the Local Uses of Cosmopolitan Connections in the Tanzanian Countryside Felicitas Becker; 3. Interrogating 'Cosmopolitanism' in an Indian Ocean Setting: Thinking Through Mombasa on the Swahili Coast Kai Kresse; 4. Translators of Empire: Colonial Cosmopolitanism Ottoman Bureaucrats and the Struggle over the Governance of Yemen 1898-1914 Thomas Kuehn; 5. Islampolis Cosmopolis: Ottoman Urbanity Between Myth Memory and Postmodernity Ariel Salzmann; 6. Cosmopolitan Cursing in Late-Nineteenth Century Alexandria Will Hanley; 7. Kebabs and Port Wine: The Culinary Cosmopolitanism of Anglo-Persian Dining 1800-1835 Nile Green; 8. Abdur Rahman Chughtai: Cosmopolitan Mughal Aesthetic in the Age of Print Iftikhar Dadi; 9. Cosmopolitanism and Authenticity: The Doctrine of Tashabbuh Bi'l-Kuffar ('Imitating the Infidel') in Modern South Asian Fatwas Muhammad Khalid Masud; About the Contributors.
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