Slavery and the Shaping of the Premodern Muslim Family
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About this book
Slavery and the Shaping of the Muslim Family delves into the wide-ranging and complex subject of slavery within the familial sphere of Islamic societies. For too long, secondary literature has treated the family and slavery as separate domains, overlooking the ways in which enslaved individuals were deeply embedded in domestic life. Contemporary research increasingly recognises that the presence and participation of slaves within households were crucial to the formation of both family structures and broader social frameworks in the Islamic world.
Bringing together the work of distinguished historian-philologists specialising in diverse regions of the Islamic world, the book examines this theme through a variety of genres – including Islamic jurisprudence, literature, and mysticism. What unites these contributions is a shared commitment to primary sources and a rigorous approach to historical inquiry. While the majority of the chapters address the premodern era, the volume also includes work that extends into the eighteenth century, enriching the discussion with a wider chronological perspective.
This volume underscores the value of approaching social history from an intersectional perspective – one that resists viewing the individual as a monolithic whole, and instead attends to the multiple dimensions of identity that inform and mediate social relations across varied contexts, both spatial and temporal.
Author / Editor information
Cristina de la Puente, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científica (CSIC), Instituto de Lenguas y Culturas del Mediterráneo (ILC), Madrid, Spain; Karen Moukheiber, Humanities and Cultural Studies, University of Balamond, Koura Lebanon; Serena Tolino, Unit for the Study of the Middle East and Muslim Societies, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Topics
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Frontmatter
I -
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Contents
V -
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Introduction: Asymmetrical Dependencies and the Muslim Family
1 - Part I: Legal Frameworks and Domestic Norms
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The Marriage of the Slave Without Permission: Religion in the Law (Second–Fifth/Eighth–Eleventh Centuries)
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Regulating Slave Marriages in al-Jāmiʿ al-kabīr: Gender, Labour, and Ties of Dependency Within the Familial Household in Ninth Century Ḥanafī Jurisprudence
69 -
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Rayḥān and his Uncle: Dependency and Kinship in a Lease Contract on Papyrus
85 -
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Bound with the Family: Slaves in the Family Setting of Early Modern Crimean Khanate
111 - Part II: Female Slaves in Male-Authored Literature and Discourses
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Female Slaves, Family and Society in Arabic Literary Sources of the Ninth and Tenth Centuries
131 -
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Free Wives and Slave Concubines in Muslim Households, c. 900–1300: Sex, Status, and Family Dynamics
155 -
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From the Cradle to the Court: Domestic Ties and Legal Agency in the Umm al-Walad’s World
181 - Part III: Slavery, Religion and Foreignness
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Christian Slaves in Andalusi Muslim Households. Slavery, Religion and Language in the Umayyad Period (Second-Fourth/Eighth-Tenth Centuries)
207 -
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The Price of Freedom: Captivity and Community in Thirteenth-Century Toledo
235 - Part IV: Slaves Among Saints and Peasants
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In the Household of a Nasrid Rural Family: Kinship, Family Life, and Dependency Gender Relations in Everyday Life (Thirteenth Century)
253 -
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Sanctity, Ties of Dependency and iṭʿām al-ṭaʿām in Eleventh/Seventeenth Century Tunisia: Insights from a Bio-Hagiographical Source
283 -
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List of Contributors
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Index
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