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ID152360
Title ProperSlavery and the historiography of non-muslims in the Medieval Middle East
LanguageENG
AuthorWeitz, Lev
Summary / Abstract (Note)The study of non-Muslims in Islamic societies has long been a robust subfield in the historiography of the medieval Middle East. But its literature has blind spots, a significant example of which concerns slavery as a constitutive institution of non-Muslim communities. Much recent scholarship on medieval non-Muslims has tended to privilege religious affiliation as an explanatory category of social experience, leaving other legal statuses and modes of identification—especially slavery—underanalyzed. This piece will survey this historiographical hole. It will then offer a brief analysis of some Abbasid-era Syriac Christian material in which slavery figures prominently, concubines and concubinage in particular. My goal is to provide an example of how attending to the place of slavery in non-Muslim communities facilitates a much-needed historiographical shift of focus from reified religious identities to the social practices, institutions, and hierarchies upon which those communities were built.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 49, No.1; Feb 2017: p.139-142
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Middle East Studies 2017-03 49, 1
Key WordsHistoriography ;  Slavery ;  Non-Muslims ;  Medieval Middle East