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Modern Sufis and the State
This chapter is in the book Modern Sufis and the State
© 2020 Columbia University Press

© 2020 Columbia University Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Acknowledgments ix
  4. Note on Transliteration xi
  5. Introduction. Sufis and the State: The Politics of Islam in South Asia and Beyond 1
  6. Part I. Sufism and Its Modern Engagements with a Global Order
  7. 1. Anti-Colonial Militants or Liberal Peace Activists? The Role of Private Foundations in Producing Pacifist Sufis During the Cold War 27
  8. 2. From Taṣawwuf Modern to Neo-Sufism: Nurcholish Madjid, Fazlur Rahman, and the Development of an Idea 40
  9. 3. Beyond Barelwiism: Tahir-ul- Qadri as an Example of Trends in Global Sufism 57
  10. Commentary on Part I: Ambiguities and Ironic Reversals in the Categorization of Sufism 73
  11. Part II. Sufis, Sharia, and Reform
  12. 4. Is the Taliban Anti-Sufi? Deobandi Discourses on Sufism in Contemporary Pakistan 81
  13. 5. Sufism Through the Prism of Sharia: A Reformist Barelwi Girls’ Madrasa in Uttar Pradesh, India 92
  14. 6. Lives of a Fatwa: Sufism, Music, and Islamic Reform in Kachchh, Gujarat 106
  15. Commentary on Part II: Sufis, Sharia, and Reform 119
  16. Part III. Sufis and Politics in Pakistan
  17. 7. “A Way of Life Rather Than an Ideology?”: Sufism, Pīrs, and the Politics of Identity in Sindh 127
  18. 8. Sufi Politics and the War on Terror in Pakistan: Looking for an Alternative to Radical Islamism? 140
  19. 9. “Our Vanished Lady”: Memory, Ritual, and Shiʿi-Sunni Relations at Bībī Pāk Dāman 161
  20. Commentary on Part III: The Problems and Perils of Translating Sufism as “Moderate Islam” 174
  21. Part IV. Sufism in Indian National Spaces
  22. 10. Is All Politics Local? Neighborhood Shrines and Religious Healing in Contemporary India 187
  23. 11. Sufi Healing and Secular Psychiatry in India 199
  24. 12. Sufi Sound, Sufi Space: Indian Cinema and the Mise-en- Scène of Pluralism 215
  25. Commentary on Part IV: Sufism in Indian National Spaces 227
  26. Conclusion: Thinking Otherwise 233
  27. Notes 243
  28. Glossary 293
  29. Bibliography 297
  30. List of Contributors 317
  31. Index 323
  32. RELIGION, CULTURE, AND PUBLIC LIFE 345
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