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Item Details
Title: ASHRAF INTO MIDDLE CLASSES
MUSLIMS IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY DELHI
By: Margrit Pernau
Format: Hardback

List price: £35.00


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ISBN 10: 0198092288
ISBN 13: 9780198092285
Publisher: OUP INDIA
Pub. date: 2 May, 2013
Pages: 544
Description: This book studies changing formations of Muslim identities in nineteenth-century Delhi, under later Mughals and in the early days of the British Raj. It explores the role of religion in their self-definition while historicizing Islam and socially contextualizing its various manifestations. Focusing on the members of the new emerging social class called the ashraf, the book tries to understand how individuals negotiated the changing social semantics of thenineteenth century.
Synopsis: Nineteenth-century Delhi was marked by a curious mixture of political upheaval and cultural resurgence. Drawing on a wide variety of little-known sources in Urdu and Persian, apart from the more conventional British records, this book provides a revelatory and vivid narrative of Muslims in the period covering the British conquest in 1803 to the end of the Khilafat movement in 1922. Moving away from the tendency of studies on Muslims to focus on religious identity, this book allows us to historicize Islam and socially contextualize its many manifestations. Treating identities as inherently dynamic and ever changing, Pernau argues that religious identity became central for Muslims only in the last third of the nineteenth century, and this was closely linked with the creation of a middle class whose members described themselves as ashraf, or 'men from a good family'. The new concept of respectability or sharafat on which the middle class was based allowed it to, at once, draw a distance from the old nobility, bring the learned section of the community closer to the businessmen, and demarcate it sharply from the subalterns.The book focuses on the agency of historical actors-their perceptions and memories-to help us understand what it means to be a 'Muslim' as well as fathom the varied interactions between identities defined by religion, language, geography, and gender. In many ways, the book is itself a dialogue between Indian and European historiography, and will interest not just academics but also 'Delhi and Urdu lovers'.
Publication: India
Imprint: OUP India
Returns: Non-returnable
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