Challenging Cosmopolitanism
Coercion, Mobility and Displacement in Islamic Asia
Contributor(s)
Gedacht, Joshua (editor)
Feener, R. Michael (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
Cosmopolitanism has emerged as a key category in Islamic Studies, defining models of Muslim mobility, pluralism and tolerance that challenge popular perceptions of religious extremism. Such celebrations and valorisations of mobility and trans-regional consciousness, however, tend to conflate border-crossing with opportunity and social diversity with ethical progress. At the same time, they generally disregard the ways in which such forms of cosmopolitanism have been entwined with structures of domination, economic control and violence. This volume addresses these issues in ways that help to contextualize contemporary issues such as the global refugee crisis in relation to longer histories of Muslim mobility and coercion.
Featuring new historical and ethnographic research on China and Southeast Asia, this book explores how power and violence have shaped the experiences of Sufis and state-builders, as well as refugees and rebels, contributing to a more nuanced understanding of Islamic cosmopolitanism.
Keywords
China; cosmopolitanism; violence; Islam; Southeast Asia; Asian historyISBN
9781474435123; 9781474435116OCN
1135845133Publisher
Edinburgh University PressPublisher website
https://www.euppublishing.com/Publication date and place
Edinburgh, UK, 2018Classification
Asian history