Imperial Muslims : Islam, community and authority in the Indian Ocean, 1839-1937

Item

Title

Imperial Muslims : Islam, community and authority in the Indian Ocean, 1839-1937

Creator

Reese, Scott S.

Date

2017

Publisher

Edinburgh University Press

Description

A great deal has been written about the webs, nodes and networks created by Britain’s Indian Ocean Empire during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Much of the focus has been on the political, legal or economic consequences of empire; this book redresses the balance, devoting its attention to the personal and social. Using the British Settlement of Aden, it examines the development of a local Muslim community within the spaces created by imperial rule from the mid-nineteenth through mid-twentieth century. It explores how individuals from widely disparate backgrounds brought together by the networks of empire created a cohesive community utilizing the one commonality at their disposal: their faith. Specifically, it examines how religious institutions and spiritual ideas served as parameters for the creation of community and the kinds of symbolic and cultural capital an individual needed to attain communal membership and influence within the confines of imperial rule.

Subject

Muslims -- Indian Ocean Region -- History -- 19th century
Religious communities -- Indian Ocean Region -- History -- 19th century
RELIGION -- Islam -- General
Indian Ocean Region

Language

English

isbn

9780748697663

Rights

uri

Item sets

Imperial Muslims : Islam, community and authority in the Indian Ocean, 1839-1937