Islam and Religious Change in Pakistan: Sufis and Ulema in 20th Century South Asia

Author:   Saadia Sumbal
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367622428


Pages:   196
Publication Date:   29 July 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Islam and Religious Change in Pakistan: Sufis and Ulema in 20th Century South Asia


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Author:   Saadia Sumbal
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9780367622428


ISBN 10:   0367622424
Pages:   196
Publication Date:   29 July 2021
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. Migrant Sufis and ‘rooting’ of Islam (ca. 1600–1900) 2. Reformist Islam and Sufism: A dialectical religious identity 3. Reformist Islam and Majlis-i-Ahrar's Politics of Nationalism 4. Sectarianism and the politics of religious exclusion 5. Deobandi identity and sectarian cleavage Conclusion

Reviews

Islam's modern transformations are all too often viewed either in doctrinal abstraction or on the cumulative large scale. Both angles easily lose sight of social facts on the ground that shape religious change in any given setting. Through a revealing case study of the Mianwali region of Pakistani Punjab, Saadia Sumbal unravels the knot of local needs, national politics and South Asia-wide reformist teachings that over the course of a century sealed the fate of customary Sufi Islam. Nile Green, author of Sufism: A Global History. Richly situated in relation to previous scholarship on Sufism and Islam in South Asia, Saadia Sumbal's study of religious change in Pakistan examines how, Islamic reformism came to be established in a region where Sufism had been dominant and closely linked to local, tribal political structures. Through a well-researched case study of Mianwali in northwestern Punjab, Sumbal effectively traces the impact of state-led ideologies on local practices, and providing a detailed account of the penetration of reformist orientations into Sufism and hardening of sectarian boundaries within the context of distinctive local movements. Katherine Pratt Ewing, Professor of Religion Director, South Asia Institute Columbia University In this important book, Saadia Sumbal renews the study of the impact of Sufism on society and politics, through her research centered on the case of Mianwali, of Pakistani south-western Punjab. She demonstrates how reformist Islamic movements contributed, with the action of the State, to reduce the space of Sufism in religious life, arguing that they represented a form of modernity. She excels in linking the micro and macro levels in order to analyze convincingly the different processes of contestation and negotiation that led to this outcome. Michel Boivin, Director of the Centre for South Asian Studies, Paris Research University


In this pioneering book Saadia Sumbal explores in the context of the Pakistani district of Mianwali how reforming Islam gained serious purchase in a region dominated by Sufism. In the process she demonstrates how local struggles might be reflected in the affairs of the army and the nation. This is an excellent example of the value of district-level studies. Francis Robinson, Royal Holloway, University of London Islam's modern transformations are all too often viewed either in doctrinal abstraction or on the cumulative large scale. Both angles easily lose sight of social facts on the ground that shape religious change in any given setting. Through a revealing case study of the Mianwali region of Pakistani Punjab, Saadia Sumbal unravels the knot of local needs, national politics and South Asia-wide reformist teachings that over the course of a century sealed the fate of customary Sufi Islam. Nile Green, author of Sufism: A Global History. Richly situated in relation to previous scholarship on Sufism and Islam in South Asia, Saadia Sumbal's study of religious change in Pakistan examines how Islamic reformism came to be established in a region where Sufism had been dominant and closely linked to local, tribal political structures. Through a well-researched case study of Mianwali in northwestern Punjab, Sumbal effectively traces the impact of state-led ideologies on local practices, and provides a detailed account of the penetration of reformist orientations into Sufism and hardening of sectarian boundaries within the context of distinctive local movements. Katherine Pratt Ewing, Professor of Religion Director, South Asia Institute at Columbia University In this important book, Saadia Sumbal renews the study of the impact of Sufism on society and politics, through her research centered on the case of Mianwali, of Pakistani northwestern Punjab. She demonstrates how reformist Islamic movements contributed, with the action of the State, to reduce the space of Sufism in religious life, arguing that they represented a form of modernity. She excels in linking the micro and macro levels in order to analyze convincingly the different processes of contestation and negotiation that led to this outcome. Michel Boivin, Director of the Centre for South Asian Studies, Paris Research University


Author Information

Saadia Sumbal is Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Forman Christian College University, Pakistan.

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