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ID105024
Title ProperEmbracing the Ummah
Other Title Informationstudent politics beyond state power in Pakistan
LanguageENG
AuthorNelson, Matthew J
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Studies of student politics in Pakistan often focus on the competition between 'secular' and 'religious' student groups-for example, the leftward-leaning National Students Federation, regional parties with a broadly secular orientation like the Pakhtun Students Federation, the Islami Jamiat-e-Tuleba (Islamic Students Association), and sectarian groups like the (Shi'a) Imamia Students Organization. This paper describes the emergence of an increasingly violent stalemate between and amongst these groups since the 1960s. It then argues that for a growing number of students this stalemate produced a certain disenchantment with exclusionary efforts to control the 'state-based Muslim nationalism' that lay behind the formation of Pakistan itself. Seeking alternatives, these disenchanted students developed an interest in non-state-based forms of Muslim solidarity-forms that rejected the constraints of territorial Muslim nationalism in favour of transnational movements focused on the revitalization of Muslim solidarity on a truly global scale-movements like the (Deobandi) Tablighi Jama'at and the (Barelwi) Da'wat-e-Islami. Tracing this development, this paper takes up one application of Talal Asad's argument that alternative expressions of religion (and religious solidarity) are 'produced' by specific political circumstances. It also examines this formulation in the light of other theories that take an interest in the effects-indeed the potentially 'democratizing' effects-of protracted political stalemates.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 45, No. 3; May 2011: p565-596
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol. 45, No. 3; May 2011: p565-596
Key WordsUmmah ;  Student Politics ;  State Power ;  Pakistan ;  Islami Jamiat-e-Tuleba