ID | 140457 |
Title Proper | Crises of the public in muslim India |
Other Title Information | critiquing ‘custom’ at Aligarh and Deoband |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ingram, Brannon D |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article argues that Sayyid Ahmad Khan (1817–98) and Ashraf ‘Ali Thanvi (1863–1943) were, respectively, exemplars of what I will call the liberal critique of custom on the one hand, and the Islamic legal critique of custom on the other. I argue that a range of overlapping semantic fields in their Urdu works—‘custom’ (rasm), ‘reform’ (islah), ‘decline’ (zawal, tanazzul) and ‘nation’ or ‘moral community’ (qawm), among others—opens up new lines of inquiry in comparing Aligarh and Deoband, typically treated as incommensurable in their views, as institutions and movements. I suggest, additionally, that ‘the public’ (‘amm) was a shared frame through which they envisioned implementing their respective projects. At the imagined centre of these publics, they located a new sort of Muslim: literate, self-regulating, self-fashioning, guided by rationality (‘aql) and free, above all, of the moral and social entanglements of ‘custom’. |
`In' analytical Note | South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 38, No.3; Sep 2015: p.403-418 |
Journal Source | South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol: 38 No 3 |
Key Words | India ; Islamic Law ; Custom ; Deoband ; Aligarh ; Islam ; Customary Practice |