Contents and AbstractsIntroduction: Walking Away from the Theater of History chapter abstract
The introduction begins with an ethnographic anecdote of a man who walks away from a historical play being staged in the ruins of Firoz Shah Kotla and is stopped short by the invisible voice of a Muslim saint. This anecdote becomes the allegorical frame through which the book is introduced. The introduction sketches out the history of Delhi from the late 18th century to the contemporary period, but more importantly argues that for those who come to Firoz Shah Kotla, it is not the past as history that is important, but more importantly, the past as holding open potentialities for life, for the present and the future.
1Jinnealogy: Archival Amnesia and Islamic Theology in Post-Partition Delhi chapter abstractThis chapter brings together oral history accounts, popular Urdu theological literature, and files from the Record Room of the ASI to bring together two parallel tracks; the growing presence of the jinn in post-Partition Delhi and the institutionalized amnesia of the official archives concerning everything prior to Partition and Independence in 1947. The chapter shows how the jinn are increasingly present in the blank spaces of the map, where the plans of the bureaucracy, the verdicts of the judiciary and the illegibility of the post-Partition Indian state attempt vast erasures of the city's Muslim landscapes, and how jinnealogy, the supersession of human chains of memory by the long lives of the jinn, challenges the magical amnesia of the state by allowing for other temporalities and modes of witnessing against the empty, homogenous time of the bureaucratic present.
2Saintly Visions: The Ethics of Elsewhen chapter abstractDrawing upon ethnographic accounts from Firoz Shah Kotla as well as Urdu literary evocations of Delhi's ruin-scape, this chapter demonstrates how the experience of the sacred amidst these ruins is that of an immersion in multiple times simultaneously, and a cessation of time's "flow". The immersion in multiple times at ruins like Firoz Shah Kotla contains transformative potential for the people who come here. Here, the jinn-saints, often seen in visitors' dreams and visions wearing medieval robes, embody another time, different from the frenetic time of the contemporary city. This chapter shows how nineteenth-century colonial violence imbued the ruin known as Pir Ghaib (the invisible saint) with sacrality. This sacrality was linked to the nostalgic remembrance of the exiled Mughal emperor and the lost political order of Mughal rule, deeply tied to Sufi ethics and ideas of justice.
3Strange(r)ness chapter abstractThis chapter explores the ethics of nameless intimacy at Firoz Shah Kotla, where people who have known each other for twenty years or more seldom acknowledge caste and religious identity, rarely learning one another's proper names, referring to each other instead by nicknames and locational epithets. It shows how this ethics of namelessness points us towards a Sufi culture of gharib-navazi (hospitality to strangers) that is central to the healing power attributed to dargah spaces. The anonymity afforded by namelessness allows people to, even if temporarily, escape the often oppressive structures of social and familial identity. This estrangement, this making strange of the self, is the beginning of a process of reinventing one's self and relation to the world. One aspect of this process is expressing and acting on one's individual desires, even when they violate the normative morality of family and community.
4Desiring Women chapter abstractThis chapter discusses male-female interactions at Firoz Shah Kotla, where unrelated men and women often sit together for hours, speaking of desire, love, and loss. This is highly unusual in Delhi, a city with a reputation for violence against women. Here, in a space of Islam, a religion associated with a highly patriarchal order, women can be freer and more open, in both their interactions with men and in talking about their desires, than they can be in most public spaces in Delhi. Drawing on letters written by women at Firoz Shah Kotla and comparing them to women's voices as portrayed in pre-modern Rekhti poetry, it establishes a long tradition of intimacy with Muslim saintly figures that has allowed women to articulate individual longings and a sense of selfhood. It shows how the anti-patriarchal potentialities of Islam have continued to coexist along with the patriarchal juridical consensus.
5Translation chapter abstractThis chapter begins with an ethnographic anecdote from Firoz Shah Kotla, where one of the author's friends equated Sat Yug (The Hindu idea of a past golden age) with contemporary Iraq. This was one of several moments in which he brought together and made equivalent things otherwise separated by vast temporal and conceptual distances. This chapter shows how we need to expand the idea of translations beyond language and texts to understand translation as a mode of being, which allows for the creation of shared sacred landscapes, ethical worlds and domains of meaning across conventional theological and communitarian divides. it discusses the historical processes of translation through which popular Islam has become an indistinguishable part of the ethical life of North India; the invisible religion which underlies the visible religious differences between Hinduism and Islam.
6Stones, Snakes, and Saints: Remembering the Vanished Sacred Geographies of Delhi chapter abstractThis chapter draws on eighteenth and nineteenth century accounts of prominent Sufi shrines in Delhi to show how these shrines were integrally connected to the ecology of the city. The author follows these accounts with his own visits to these sites in the contemporary city, where they have been completely disconnected from the ecological. Through oral histories, this chapter shows how this disconnect can be attributed to colonial policy, post-colonial growth, and pollution, all of which have radically changed the ontology of the sacred in the city from one of immanence, embedded in the local landscape, to one of immaterial transcendence. Only at a few sites like Firoz Shah Kotla, protected from development by archaeological policy, is an older memory and modality of the sacred still possible. The remembrance of older relations to the ecology includes the sanctification of the animals encountered in this space.
7The Shifting Enchantments of Ruins and Laws in Delhi chapter abstractThis chapter draws upon files from the post-colonial ASI, newspaper reports, and conversations with conservationists active in contemporary Delhi. It outlines a genealogy of conservation practice in Delhi and its changing relation to the life of the city, from the early twentieth century to the present. In the early twentieth century, for both British conservationists and Indo-Muslim antiquarians, these ruins were enchanted spaces, imaginative gateways to an otherwise irrecoverable Mughal past. The identification of Delhi's ruin-scape with Muslim sovereignty led to violent attacks on these sites during Partition violence, and this violence fundamentally changed the city's relation to its Muslim past. In the post-colonial era, Muslim monuments became spaces of darkness and death where no signs of (religious) life were permitted.
Conclusion: Remnants of Despair; Traces of Hope chapter abstractThe author traces his autobiographical exploration of and investment in the ruin-scape of Delhi, and his concern that the forms of life indexed by these ruins seem impossible to recover for the majority of the contemporary city. This chapter looks at recent examples of jinn veneration from Lahore, an analysis of a recent Bombay film, and new conservation paradigms taking root in Delhi to think about how the rituals, ethics, and human and animal relations at Firoz Shah Kotla connect to wider trends in South Asia. The new conservation paradigms in Delhi wish to reconnect ruins to the human life of the city, and also to the city's ecology. While this new paradigm of preservation is secular, it shares remarkable similarities with the "religious" outlook of people at Firoz Shah Kotla.
Anand Vivek Taneja is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and Anthropology at Vanderbilt University.
"An ingeniously researched and beautifully told story of how an
avowedly secular Indian nation state goes about monumentalizing,
and thereby eviscerating the lived presence of 'Muslimness' from
the great Mughal city of Delhi. Deeply evocative of the doublespeak
of majoritarian nationalism that the world is witnessing
today."
*author of Conquest and Community: The Afterlife of Warrior
Saint Ghazi Miyan*
"Anand Taneja's book offers a fascinating ethnography of the dargah
of Firoz Shah Kotla in Delhi, a place whose jinns are petitioned by
their devotees, as if in a courtroom. It reflects the social
complexity—and poetry—of this shared sacred site, which is also a
liminal space transcending caste and gender barriers. More than a
study of one structure, this book narrates the history of the
capital-city of India through its ruins and monuments. It is a
remarkably perceptive and thought-provoking analysis of the popular
culture of North India."
*Senior Research Fellow at CERI-Sciences Po/CNRS*
"Anand Taneja's Jinnealogy is a brilliant and moving meditation on
extraordinary attempts to recover a lost culture. Once you consider
seriously the practice of writing letters to the jinn at a medieval
ruin in Delhi, you will be drawn into an enchanted world. Highly
recommended."
*University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill*
"This compelling book delves into India's enigmatic silences and
unacknowledgeable memories in the aftermath of Partition. When
genealogy and social memory fail, jinnealogy activates threads of
desire and possibility unavailable to us in secular time. A
beautiful and urgent book with a taste of Borges' stories."
*Author of Knot of the Soul*
"When I return to the Kotla, I know that I will pay new attention
to those who come to pray, and no longer just see them as nameless
and faceless but as the people Taneja discovers through his
fieldwork, the flesh and blood containing hope, despair, tears and
anguish, and celebration."
*The Wire*
"Anand Vivek Taneja's fluently persuasive study traces the role of
jinns in the unusual social and religious space of a medieval ruin
in Delhi. Along the way, his Jinneaologyoffers a surprising
subaltern history of India's capital city....Jinnealogyis a rich
and enriching book. As though meandering through medieval ruins, it
takes its reader down unanticipated passageways, evocative detours,
as well as some dusty dead ends. Along the way, it repeatedly
offers unexpected vistas onto old issues such as secularism,
heritage, and community....[T]he reader isirresistibly drawn into
the stories of its diverse protagonists."
*Pacific Affairs*
"The political intervention that this book makes in the field of
the history and cultural heritage of South Asia is very timely. The
erasure of Indo-Persian and Islamic culture from the modern nation
state of India has reached a crisis point, and this book provides a
poetic and creative interpretation of the sites where a shared
popular Islamic aesthetic and interpretive community remains
alive....[T]he book is an excellent, creative, exhaustively
researched and beautifully written intervention into the ongoing
debate on the erasure of Islamic cultural heritage from the modern
nation state of India."
*Global Intellectual History*
"Taneja's book helps open the 'discursive tradition' to the
mysteries of Islamic figuration—allowing traces, which are not
signs, to be strange. His observations are gentle yet pressing,
motivated by a deep sense of past possibilities, an urgency to make
room for realms of Islamic tradition that need not be legible to be
lived."
*The Immanent Frame*
"Anand Vivek Taneja's Jinnealogy: Time, Islam, and Ecological
Thought in the Medieval Ruins of Delhi is an elegant contemplation
of the ruins of the fortress built by Firoz Shah Tughlaq, who ruled
Delhi from 1351-88 AD....I am most especially taken, though, by the
book's elegiac quality. Even while Taneja insists upon the
liveliness of the life that has emerged on the neglected grounds of
the fortress...the tone of the book remains persistently and
appropriately mournful."
*The Immanent Frame*
"Beautifully written....Jinnealogy constitutes an extended argument
for gharib nawazi, the very kindness that opens up an aesthetics
and an ethics that allow for compassionate and caring ways of being
and acting in this world."
*American Ethnologist*
"This book will be essential reading for those interested in the
anthropology of religion, South Asian studies, and Islamic studies.
Taneja's diverse ethnographic approach depicts the multiplicities
of North Indian religion and culture. At a time of increasing
Islamophobia in India and globally, Jinnealogy presents a
compelling argument of possibility anchored in the discourse and
history of a Muslim community that is essential to the city and
culture of Delhi, past and present."
*Reading Religion*
"[Jinnealogy] is a shining example of what might be gained if
researchers stop labouring to produce neat and linear narratives
that establish unambiguous causal relationships....[It] is a
harbinger of hope that the spatial turn in the social sciences does
not effectively mean that history and time are irrelevant."
*Contributions to Indian Sociology*
"In this impressive and deeply personal monograph, Taneja draws on
insights gleaned from years of fieldwork in Delhi to invite the
reader on a fantastic journey....Written in sparkling poetic prose,
Jinnealogy is a model of ethnographic and archival research
combined with theoretical sophistication. Rare for academic tomes,
you will not want to put this book down once you begin to digest
its wisdom."
*Religious Studies Review*
"[This] book is a brilliant, evocative, and gripping account of
Jinnealogy: the entanglements and traces of Jinn as a form of
memory and practice that challenges the Hindu nation-state and
dominant ideas of religion and social identity. The chapters
capture attention, drawing the reader through historical details,
ethnographic encounters, popular debates, and critical theory. It
is an emblematic text for the Anthropology of Islam and South
Asia."
*ReOrient*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |