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Creating a new Medina: state power, Islam, and the quest for Pakistan in late colonial North India Dhulipala, Venkat

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge University Press 2016 DelhiDescription: xxvi, 529 pISBN:
  • 9781316616314
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 322.420882971 D4C7
Summary: This book examines how the idea of Pakistan was articulated and debated in the public sphere and how popular enthusiasm was generated for its successful achievement, especially in the crucial province of U.P. (now Uttar Pradesh) in the last decade of British colonial rule in India. It argues that Pakistan was not simply a vague idea that serendipitously emerged as a nation-state, but was popularly imagined as a sovereign Islamic State, a new Medina, as some called it. In this regard, it was envisaged as the harbinger of Islam’s renewal and rise in the twentieth century, the new leader and protector of the global community of Muslims, and a worthy successor to the defunct Turkish Caliphate. http://www.cambridgeindia.org/Academic/subjects/History---other-areas/Creating-a-New-Medina?ISBN=9781316616314
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Ahmedabad Non-fiction 322.420882971 D4C7 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 194366
Total holds: 0

Table of Contents:


Introduction
1. Nationalists, communalists and the 1937 provincial elections
2. Muslim mass contacts and the rise of the Muslim League
3. Two constitutional lawyers from Bombay and the debate over Pakistan in the public sphere
4. Muslim League and the idea of Pakistan in the United Provinces
5. Ulama at the forefront of politics
6. Urdu press, public opinion and controversies over Pakistan
7. Fusing Islam and state power
8. The referendum on Pakistan

This book examines how the idea of Pakistan was articulated and debated in the public sphere and how popular enthusiasm was generated for its successful achievement, especially in the crucial province of U.P. (now Uttar Pradesh) in the last decade of British colonial rule in India. It argues that Pakistan was not simply a vague idea that serendipitously emerged as a nation-state, but was popularly imagined as a sovereign Islamic State, a new Medina, as some called it. In this regard, it was envisaged as the harbinger of Islam’s renewal and rise in the twentieth century, the new leader and protector of the global community of Muslims, and a worthy successor to the defunct Turkish Caliphate.


http://www.cambridgeindia.org/Academic/subjects/History---other-areas/Creating-a-New-Medina?ISBN=9781316616314


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