ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook on Islam in Asia offers both new and established scholarship on Muslim societies and religious practices across Asia, from a variety of interdisciplinary angles, with chapters covering South, Central, East and Southeast Asia, as well as Africa–Asia connections.

Presenting work grounded in archival, literary, and ethnographic inquiry, contributors to this handbook lend their expertise to paint a picture of Islam as deeply connected to and influenced by Asia, often by-passing or reversing relationships of power and authority that have placed ‘Arab’ Islam in a hierarchically superior position vis-à-vis Asia. This handbook is structured in four parts, each representing an emergent area of inquiry:

  • Frames
  • Authority and authorizing practices
  • Muslim spatialities
  •  Imaginations of piety

Dislodging ingrained assumptions that Asia is at the periphery of Islam – and that Islam is at the periphery of Asia’s cultural matrix – this handbook sets an agenda against the ‘center-periphery’ dichotomy, as well as the syncretism paradigm that has dominated conversations on Islam in Asia. It thus demonstrates possibilities for new scholarly approaches to the study of Islam within the ‘Asian context.’

This ground-breaking handbook is a valuable resource to students and scholars of Asian studies, religious studies, and cultural studies more broadly.

part I|77 pages

Frames

chapter 1|13 pages

Studying Islam

The view from Asia

chapter 4|15 pages

Islam and Sanskritic imaginaires in southern Asia

Mount Meru in Arabia

chapter 5|12 pages

Islamic feminisms in Asia

Trials and tribulations for Muslim women 1

part II|102 pages

Authority and authorizing practices

chapter 6|13 pages

Eastern African doyens in South Asia

Premodern Islamic intellectual interactions

chapter 7|15 pages

The making of Qīz Bībī in Central Asia's oral shrine traditions

From the Great Lady to a fourteen-year-old virgin

chapter 8|16 pages

The Ismailis of Badakhshan

Conversion and narrative in highland Asia

chapter 9|13 pages

Islamic law in Xinjiang

chapter 10|16 pages

Major turning points for Shiʿi Islam in modern South Asia

Princely states, partition, and a revolution

chapter 11|14 pages

Making Islamic finance in South Asia

The state, the seminary, and the business corporation

part III|86 pages

Muslim spatialities

chapter 13|13 pages

South Asian Shiʿi sacred geography

Tracing ʿAli's footprints

chapter 14|13 pages

Muslim pilgrimage in Southeast Asia

Saints among the rice fields

chapter 15|16 pages

Ḥaḍramī Sufi-scholars and their shrines in Southeast Asia

A geography of sanctity

chapter 16|16 pages

Sacred spaces and the making of Sufism in Sri Lanka 1

Between violence and piety

part IV|84 pages

Imaginations of piety

chapter 19|13 pages

Mapping the trajectory of Islam in Chinese terms

Community matters

chapter 20|14 pages

The “moral background” of work in Central Asia

The sacred in the mundane

chapter 21|14 pages

Pious lives of Soviet Muslims

chapter 22|13 pages

Two Deobandi views on being Muslim in India

Indian bodies, Meccan hearts

chapter 23|12 pages

The Tablighi Jama'at movement in maritime Southeast Asia

Piety in motion

chapter 24|16 pages

A tree enrooted

African Sufi saints as “lineage deities” of a Muslim community of East African ancestry in Western India (Gujarat and Mumbai)