Qur'an in South Asia

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A01=Kamran Bashir
Arabic Lexicon
Arabic Literature
Arabic Rhetoric
Author_Kamran Bashir
British India
Category=QRPF1
Colonial Administration
Colonial India
colonial India studies
Delhi College
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Exegetical Literature
Exegetical Tradition
Hermeneutics
Islamic hermeneutics
Islamic Sciences
Mirza
Modern Islam
Modern Muslim Scholarship
modern Qur'an interpretation in British India
Mughal Emperors Shah Jahan
Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College
Muslim Exegetes
Muslim intellectual history
Muslim Qur'an
Muslim Qur’an
Muslim Religious Sciences
Muslim Scholars
Muslim Sciences
Muslim Tradition
Muslim World
pre-modern
Qur'anic Hermeneutics
Qur’anic Hermeneutics
religious modernity analysis
South Asia
South Asian religious thought
tafsir scholarship
Traditional Islamic Sciences
Urdu Translation
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032027913
  • Weight: 440g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The book investigates modern Qur’an commentaries in South Asia and engages with how Muslim scholars have imagined and assessed their past intellectual heritage. The research is focused on British India from the time of the Mutiny of 1857 to the moment of the Partition of united India in 1947.

Offering critical scrutiny of Muslim exegesis of the Qur’an in North India, the study especially focuses on the Qur’anic thought of Sayyid Ahmed Khan (d. 1989), Ashraf Ali Thanawi (d. 1943), and Hamid al-Din Farahi (d. 1930). The volume challenges widespread assumptions of an all-pervasive reform and revivalism underlying the academic study of Islam. Instead of looking for Muslim revivalism and reform as epistemological foundations, it stresses the study of modern Qur’an commentaries, in particular local and cosmopolitan contexts. Departing from the oft-repeated explanations of Muslim scholarship and modern Islam through the lens of traditionalism and modernism, it discovers how Muslim scholars viewed themselves in relation to the Islamic tradition, and how they imagined and assessed their past intellectual heritage.

Studying the history of the interpretation of the Qur’an in the multiple contexts of nineteenth and early twentieth-century British India, the book will be of interest to readers of Qur’anic studies, modern Islam and South Asian studies.

Kamran Bashir is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Liberal Arts at Beaconhouse National University (Lahore, Pakistan). His academic contributions have appeared in Religious Imaginations and Global Transitions, ed. James Walters (2018) and in the Journal of Qur’anic Studies and Social Identities. He has earlier taught at the University of Victoria and Camosun College, Canada.

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