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ID155916
Title ProperAgrarian forms of Islam
Other Title InformationMofussil discourses on peasant religion in the Bengal delta during the 1920s
LanguageENG
AuthorALI, TARIQ OMAR
Summary / Abstract (Note)During the 1920s, a new genre of didactic poems prescribing the proper Islamic practice of everyday peasant lives were published out of printing presses in deltaic, eastern Bengal's small towns. This article argues that these printed poems constituted a discourse of agrarian Islam that prescribed reforms in peasant material life—work, commerce, consumption, attire, hairstyle, and patriarchal authority—as a means of ensuring the viability of peasants’ market-based livelihoods. The article examines the emergence of a small-town Muslim intelligentsia that authored and financed the publications of these poems out of the Bengal delta's small-town printing industry. Eschewing communalism as an analytical frame in understanding South Asian Muslim identities, this article argues that Bengali peasant Muslim subjectivity was located in peasant engagements with agrarian markets. Agrarian Islamic texts urged Muslim cultivators to be good Muslims and good peasants, by working hard, reducing consumption, and balancing household budgets.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 51, No.5; Sep 2017: p.1311-1339
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2017-10 51, 5
Key Words1920 ;  Agrarian Forms of Islam ;  Mofussil Discourses ;  Bengal Delta