ABSTRACT

Analysing an extensive range of texts and publications across multiple genres, formats and literary lineages, Reclaiming Karbala studies the emergence and formation of a viable Muslim identity in Bengal over the late-19th century through the 1940s. Beginning with an explanation of the tenets of the battle of Karbala, this multi-layered study explores what it means to be Muslim, as well as the nuanced relationship between religion, linguistic identity and literary modernity that marks both Bengaliness and Muslimness in the region.This book is an intervention into the literature on regional Islam in Bengal, offering a complex perspective on the polemic on religion and language in the formation of a jatiya Bengali Muslim identity in a multilingual context. This book, by placing this polemic in the context of intra-Islamic reformist conflict, shows how all these rival reformist groups unanimously negated the Karbala-centric commemorative ritual of Muharram and Shī‘ī intercessory piety to secure a pro-Caliphate sensibility as the core value of the Bengali Muslim public sphere.

chapter |30 pages

Introduction

Situating Karbala in Bengal

chapter 1|45 pages

Mapping Karbala from Orality to Print

chapter 2|37 pages

Print and Husayn-Centric Piety

chapter 3|47 pages

The Rhetoric of Loss and Recovery

The Moment of Muslim jātīyatā

chapter 4|53 pages

The Recovery of the Past

History and Biography

chapter 5|62 pages

Literature, Modernity, Multilinguality

chapter |14 pages

Afterword

300 Karbalas and Beyond 1