Lexington Books
Pages: 176
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-6581-2 • Hardback • July 2012 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-6583-6 • eBook • July 2012 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
Dr. Husain Kassim is an Associate Professor at the University of Central Florida. He has also taught as a Fulbright scholar at the University of Bremen, the Fulbright-University of Salzburg Distinguish Chair in Intercultural Theology and Religion, and as a Visiting Professor of Philosophy at the University of Karachi. Dr. Kassim’s areas of specialization are Islamic Studies, Islamic Law and Medieval Philosophy. He is the author of Sarkhsi: The Doctrine of Juristic Preference in Islamic Jurisprudence, Aristotle and Aristotelianism in Medieval Muslim, Jewish and Christian Philosophy, and Legitimizing Modernity in Islam: Muslim Modus Vivendi and Western Modernity as well as several articles on similar topics.
Introduction: What this study is about
Chapter 1: The Historical Landscape of Egypt and Muslim India as Islamic Societies Prior to Colonial Rule
Chapter 2: Shifting Identities: The ‘Islamicate’ Societies of Egypt, Muslim India (Pakistan), Muslims in India, and its Aftermath
Chapter 3: Ethnicity and Minorities
Chapter 4: Transformation of Traditional Islamic Language and Literature into a Modern ‘Islamicate’ Literature
Chapter 5: Legal System and Judicial Institutions of Egypt and Muslim India
Chapter 6: Education, Educational System and Islamization Project of Knowledge
Chapter 7:An ‘Islamicate’ Woman: Gender Relations and Women’s Rights
At a time when Islamic identities are contested in the Muslim world, Husain Kassim’s Islamicate Societies argues that, in the cases of Egypt and Muslim India, insufficient attention has been paid to the impact of colonialism. Both modernizing trends that reject the colonial past and attempts to return to pre-colonial forms of Islamic identity are unlikely to succeed. With insight, Kassim sifts and sorts what a sound recovery of the colonial past entails for Islamic identities, a project with implications that reach far and wide within and beyond Muslim communities.
— John K. Roth, Edward J. Sexton Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Claremont McKenna College
Professor Kassim’s comparative study examines the process in which outside powers, through their colonial policies, change the internal dynamics of Muslims in India and Egypt. The book is an attempt to understand the transition from Islamic to Islamicate identity. The author’s creative use of the term 'Islamicate' is most interesting and will surely cause healthy debates among scholars of Islam. As such, the book will surely be of interest to students of history, philosophy and sociology of Islam.
— Hakan Özoglu, University of Central Florida
Husain Kassim’s study is a much-needed analysis of the question of the relationship between culture, religion, and social structures within Egypt and India. His appropriation of the term “Islamicate” drives a wedge between religious accounts of society and accounts in which religion stands in for forces of modernization and colonialism. His thesis is provocative – that colonialism ushered in a transformation of Islamic social thought through the introduction of Western ideas and modern institutions, and this change produced a crisis of identity in these cultures. This crisis extends to every institution in society, from social and political to legal, cultural, and religious. The result, the 'Islamicate' society, is a new object of social and philosophical analysis and the basis for this compelling and persuasive comparative study. Kassim’s synoptic historical and cultural analysis deserves close attention.
— Bruce B. Janz, University of Central Florida