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082 _a305.6971054 Mus
100 _aMadan, T.N. (ed.)
245 0 _aMuslims communities of South Asia: culture and society
250 _aculture and society
260 _aNew Delhi
_bVikas Publishing House
_c1976
300 _a183p.
520 _aThere is a growing realization that one of the glaring gaps in the sociology of South Asia has been the scant attention which sociologists and social anthropologists have paid to the study of Muslim communities. This is perhaps particularly true of India. Students of comparative religion and historians have of course been very active and for long, but the very excel- lence of their work has been a long-standing challenge to sociologists to enter the field and provide new perspectives. The task that has awaited them has been the unravelling and interpretation of the encounter between the great classical tradition of Islam and the local cultures of Asia. What makes this task particularly important and interesting is the fact that in some of the countries of the region (namely India, Nepal and Sri Lanka) the local cul- tural tradition, whether Buddhism or Hinduism, has been dominant in politics as well as in culture. In the other countries, Bangladesh and Pakistan, the Islamic way of life has a distinctive character which sets them apart in some ways from the Muslim societies of South-East Asia or West Asia. It follows that while the Muslims of all these countries are of course part and parcel of the universal Islamic brotherhood, they are also locally rooted in historical cultures. Conscious of the importance of this undertaking, the editors of Contributions to Indian Sociology (New Series) decided to devote a whole volume of the periodical (VI, 1972) to the subject of “Muslim communities of South Asia : culture and society”. The general theme that was proposed to the contributors (who included three Indians, two Americans, one Frenchman, one Pakistani, and one Sinhalese) was that of identity formation: What does it mean to be a Muslim? While most of the contributors addressed themselves directly to this question, the others did so only indirectly. The outcome, the editors thought, was altogether very satisfactory, not because any issues had been resolved—that never was the intention—but because important questions, both substantive and methodological, had been posed. From whatever res- ponses we received, it was obvious that our readers thought that the papers contained many useful insights and provocative ideas. Since the journal reaches only a limited readership, consisting of the subscribers, and in view of the many inquiries received by us, the editors and the publishers have decided to bring out the issue in a limited hard- cover edition. It is thus hoped that this collection of exploratory papers will reach a wider readership.
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