The Silk Road and Beyond attempts to capture lived realities across Central Asia, Iran, Turkey, Spain, Italy, Morocco, Finland, Britain, USA, Palestine, Switzerland, Finland, and the subcontinent. It also aims at initiating readers into encountering Muslim heritage across the four continents where cultures share commonalities beyond the narrowly defined premise of conflicts. This book is an effort to capture history, literature, mobility, crafts, architectural traditions, and cultural vistas by focusing on diverse Muslim individuals, communities, cities, and their edifices. It attempts to…mehr
The Silk Road and Beyond attempts to capture lived realities across Central Asia, Iran, Turkey, Spain, Italy, Morocco, Finland, Britain, USA, Palestine, Switzerland, Finland, and the subcontinent. It also aims at initiating readers into encountering Muslim heritage across the four continents where cultures share commonalities beyond the narrowly defined premise of conflicts. This book is an effort to capture history, literature, mobility, crafts, architectural traditions, and cultural vistas by focusing on diverse Muslim individuals, communities, cities, and their edifices. It attempts to reconstruct deeper and munificent aspects of Muslim histories and lived experience that often stay ignored by the writers and travellers. Normative accounts of cities such as Bukhara, Jerusalem, Isfahan, Fes, Samarkand, Granada, Palermo, Cordova, or Konya may lifelessly posit them as sheer tourist destinations, ignoring their cultural and historical depth. Written in an autobiographical genre, this book benefits from a 40-year-long exposure and encounters with the vibrant lives across the four continents as experienced by a curious Muslim academic at different stages of his life. The reader can explore and relish these predominantly Muslim locales along with a frequent exposure to r socio-intellectual institutions in Europe and the United States.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Professor Iftikhar H. Malik, FRHisSoc, has been teaching modern history at Bath Spa University since 1995. During the 1990s, Malik held the Quaid-i-Azam Chair at St. Antonys College, Oxford, and since 2002, has been a Member of the Common Room at Wolfson College, Oxford. With doctoral and postdoctoral training at Michigan State, Columbia, and UC, Berkeley, Malik has authored 17 books, 75 scholarly papers, and 250 review articles. Some of Iftikhar H. Malik's recent volumes include: Pashtun Identity and Geopolitics in Southwest Asia: Pakistan and Afghanistan since 9/11 (Anthem, 2016); Pakistan: Democracy, Terror and the Building of a Nation (New Holland Publishers, 2010); The History of Pakistan (Greenwood Press, 2008); Crescent between Cross and Star: Muslims and the West after 9/11 (OUP, 2006); Jihad, Hindutva, and the Taliban: South Asia at the Crossroads (OUP, 2005) and Islam and Modernity: Muslims in Western Europe and the United States (Pluto, 2004).
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements vii Introduction ix I MEMOIRS 1. Educating Girls in Air Marshal Nur Khan's Town 2. Hakimji: A Special Cousin in a Bygone Tradition 3. Harold Marcus: Remembering an Era in Michigan 4. Revisiting Michigan State University: Lost for Words 5. An Evening with Hafiz Shirazi at the Nehru Gallery, London 46 II TRAVERSING THE SILK ROAD 6. Bukhara: Amongst Scholars and Sufis 7. Bukhara: The Abode of Muslim Renaissance 8. Samarkand: Tamerlane's City on the Silk Road 9. Samarkand to Tashkent: In Search of Navoi and Babur 10. Jerusalem: A Journey Across Contested Histories 11. Maulana Rumi's Konya in Whirling Times: A Bridge So Far 12. Isfahan: Half the World or the Heart of Another Misunderstood Land 13. Cordova, Oh Cordova! 14. In the Land of Ibn Battuta and Marabouts 15. Soaked in History: Discovering Fes 16. Encountering Italy: Leaning and Learning in Pisa 17. Contemplating in Tuscany, Lost in Sicily III NESTLING IN THE WEST 18. The Book of Curiosities at Oxford's Bodleian Library 19. 'Encounters' at Victoria and Albert Museum 20. A Tatar Amongst Finnish Tatars 21. Switzerland: The Land of Honey But Whose Money? 22. Back to the Pavilion: India and the Indus Journey Index
Acknowledgements vii Introduction ix I MEMOIRS 1. Educating Girls in Air Marshal Nur Khan's Town 2. Hakimji: A Special Cousin in a Bygone Tradition 3. Harold Marcus: Remembering an Era in Michigan 4. Revisiting Michigan State University: Lost for Words 5. An Evening with Hafiz Shirazi at the Nehru Gallery, London 46 II TRAVERSING THE SILK ROAD 6. Bukhara: Amongst Scholars and Sufis 7. Bukhara: The Abode of Muslim Renaissance 8. Samarkand: Tamerlane's City on the Silk Road 9. Samarkand to Tashkent: In Search of Navoi and Babur 10. Jerusalem: A Journey Across Contested Histories 11. Maulana Rumi's Konya in Whirling Times: A Bridge So Far 12. Isfahan: Half the World or the Heart of Another Misunderstood Land 13. Cordova, Oh Cordova! 14. In the Land of Ibn Battuta and Marabouts 15. Soaked in History: Discovering Fes 16. Encountering Italy: Leaning and Learning in Pisa 17. Contemplating in Tuscany, Lost in Sicily III NESTLING IN THE WEST 18. The Book of Curiosities at Oxford's Bodleian Library 19. 'Encounters' at Victoria and Albert Museum 20. A Tatar Amongst Finnish Tatars 21. Switzerland: The Land of Honey But Whose Money? 22. Back to the Pavilion: India and the Indus Journey Index
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