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The Ulama in Contemporary Islam
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Table of Contents

FOREWORD ix ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xiii Introduction 1 I: Islamic Law and the 'Ulama in Colonial India: A Legal Tradition in Transition 17 II: Constructions of Authority 38 III: The Rhetoric of Reform and the Religious Sphere 60 IV: Conceptions of the Islamic State 87 V: Refashioning Identities 111 VI: Religiopolitical Activism and the 'Ulama: Comparative Perspectives 144 Epilogue: The 'Ulama in the Twenty-First Century 181 NOTES 193 GLOSSARY 259 BIBLIOGRAPHY 263 INDEX 287

Promotional Information

Long before 11 September, the 'ulama were regarded as the ubiquitous agents of Islamic authority throughout the Muslim world. Yet until Muhammad Qasim Zaman, no scholar has attempted a fine-grained, comparative analysis of their multiple roles and adaptive views. This book will change the way that both scholars and observers of Islam think about contemporary Muslim societies. -- Bruce Lawrence, author of "Shattering the Myth" This highly original book offers fresh insight into the role of Islamic religious scholars in the modern world. It will shape how we understand religious tradition, sectarianism, religious knowledge and its carriers, and the diverse ways in which religious arguments are created and disseminated. The book's accessible style and persuasive comparison of religious developments in South Asia with other parts of the Muslim world make it a significant port of entry for anyone wishing to understand Islamic religious tradition and the modern social and political contexts in which it is elaborated and reproduced. -- Dale Eickelman, Dartmouth College Zaman's work is a convincing study of religious and social change. The rise of 'ulama as important political and social factors in various Muslim countries has come as a surprise to many scholars, who still find phenomena such as the Taliban puzzling. This book explains this missed perspective on modernity and shows that the 'ulama have not been oblivious to modern challenges. -- Muhammad Khalid Masud, International Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World, Leiden

About the Author

Muhammad Qasim Zaman is Robert H. Niehaus '77 Professor of Near Eastern Studies and Religion at Princeton University. He is the author of "Religion and Politics under the Early Abbasids" and the editor, with Robert W. Hefner, of "Schooling Islam: The Culture and Politics of Modern Muslim Education" (Princeton).

Reviews

"A detailed, carefully researched monographic study... Among other things, it demonstrates that the received image of Muslim clerics ... as passive, unworldly reactionaries bound to an atemporal, socially withdrawn Islam is thoroughly misconceived. In many places, by now perhaps most, they are seen as members of vanguard groups in the renovation of traditional Islamic society and belief."--Clifford Geertz, The New York Review of Books Muhammad Qasim Zaman [writes] ... with a magisterial command of both the internal discourses the ulama use among themselves and the dynamics of national and international developments. In addition, he builds his arguments with an extraordinarily rich mix of relevant examples, rarely seen and well referenced documentation, plus discerning support from other researchers, theorists, and commentators... Zaman offers what amounts to a new working definition of the ulama that locates them not at the edge but at the center of discussions charting the course of Islam in the next century."--Patrick Gaffney, American Historical Review "This book, a shining example of thorough and deliberate scholarship, forces us to re-evaluate commonly held misperceptions of the religious class and madrasa education more generally... With this unique volume, Qasim Zaman has finally provided something long missing in the field of Islamic studies: a comprehensive analysis of contemporary ulama as dynamic interpreters and producers of religious knowledge--and an analysis of the absolutely highest quality at that."--Peter Mandaville, International Sociology "Muhammad Qasim Zaman's book de-stereotypes the ulama, especially the view that they are inflexible in their attitudes, generally resistant to social changes, and, as a consequence, become redundant. He clarifies that the community of religious scholars that has existed in Muslim societies for more than a thousand years has also witnessed resurgence in contemporary Muslim societies."--Mohammad Talib, Journal of Islamic Studies "[An] excellent study... For those who wish to understand some of the ways Islam constitutes itself in the contemporary world, this persuasive study provides a well-argued and nuanced analysis of this aspect of contemporary Islam."--Library Journal "A very important and scholarly work ... this book shows how the Ulama have responded to the challenges of a rapidly changing world."--Choice "Muhammad Qasim Zaman dispels any notion of the homogeneity of Muslim thought in The Ulama in Contemporary Islam, a masterly study of the role of the 'ulama' in India and, after 1947, in Pakistan."--Mahmood Ibrahim, Bulletin of the Royal Institute for Inter-Faith Studies "With this book Muhammad Qasim Zaman has placed the modern 'ulama' squarely into the debates over the rise and appeal of Islamist movements... The book presents a well-documented exploration of the 'ulama' in the Subcontinent, and an important comparison of the modern 'ulama' of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and India."--Richard McGregor, Islamic Studies

"A detailed, carefully researched monographic study... Among other things, it demonstrates that the received image of Muslim clerics ... as passive, unworldly reactionaries bound to an atemporal, socially withdrawn Islam is thoroughly misconceived. In many places, by now perhaps most, they are seen as members of vanguard groups in the renovation of traditional Islamic society and belief."--Clifford Geertz, The New York Review of Books Muhammad Qasim Zaman [writes] ... with a magisterial command of both the internal discourses the ulama use among themselves and the dynamics of national and international developments. In addition, he builds his arguments with an extraordinarily rich mix of relevant examples, rarely seen and well referenced documentation, plus discerning support from other researchers, theorists, and commentators... Zaman offers what amounts to a new working definition of the ulama that locates them not at the edge but at the center of discussions charting the course of Islam in the next century."--Patrick Gaffney, American Historical Review "This book, a shining example of thorough and deliberate scholarship, forces us to re-evaluate commonly held misperceptions of the religious class and madrasa education more generally... With this unique volume, Qasim Zaman has finally provided something long missing in the field of Islamic studies: a comprehensive analysis of contemporary ulama as dynamic interpreters and producers of religious knowledge--and an analysis of the absolutely highest quality at that."--Peter Mandaville, International Sociology "Muhammad Qasim Zaman's book de-stereotypes the ulama, especially the view that they are inflexible in their attitudes, generally resistant to social changes, and, as a consequence, become redundant. He clarifies that the community of religious scholars that has existed in Muslim societies for more than a thousand years has also witnessed resurgence in contemporary Muslim societies."--Mohammad Talib, Journal of Islamic Studies "[An] excellent study... For those who wish to understand some of the ways Islam constitutes itself in the contemporary world, this persuasive study provides a well-argued and nuanced analysis of this aspect of contemporary Islam."--Library Journal "A very important and scholarly work ... this book shows how the Ulama have responded to the challenges of a rapidly changing world."--Choice "Muhammad Qasim Zaman dispels any notion of the homogeneity of Muslim thought in The Ulama in Contemporary Islam, a masterly study of the role of the 'ulama' in India and, after 1947, in Pakistan."--Mahmood Ibrahim, Bulletin of the Royal Institute for Inter-Faith Studies "With this book Muhammad Qasim Zaman has placed the modern 'ulama' squarely into the debates over the rise and appeal of Islamist movements... The book presents a well-documented exploration of the 'ulama' in the Subcontinent, and an important comparison of the modern 'ulama' of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and India."--Richard McGregor, Islamic Studies

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