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Reclaiming Karbala: Nation, Islam and Literature of the Bengali Muslims

Contributor(s): Halder, Epsita (Author)

ISBN: 9780367459703

Publisher: Routledge

Hardcover
$225.00
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Pub Date: May 18, 2023

Dewey: 891.44099212

LCCN: 2021042613

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.81" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 1.40 lbs) 322 pages

Series: Routledge Studies in Comparative Literature

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

Reclaiming Karbala studies the emergence and formation of a viable Muslim identity in Bengal over the late-nineteenth century and into the 1940s.

Review Quotes:

This magnificent book sheds completely new light on the literary production and language choices of Bengal Muslims over three centuries, considering a vast array of texts in manuscript and printed form against the backdrop of successive waves of religious reform. Reclaiming Karbala shows how shifts in vocabulary, register and narrative focus need to be understood in the light of theological, political and aesthetic positions and debates. The book greatly adds to our understanding of the articulations of Muslim modernity, but also of Bengali literary modernity. The Bengal Renaissance will never look the same again.

-Prof Francesca Orsini, Professor emerita of Hindi and South Asian Literature, SOAS, University of London, UK

The struggle of Muslims in Bengal to create an identity-based literature is generally lost in nationalist historiography of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; here Epsita Halder has painstakingly peeled away the complex layers of this engagement by focusing on the central role of the Karbala narrative. The Shi'i insistence on martyrdom and Muharram ritual enactments faced a Sunni reaction that sought to suppress practice while appropriating the trope, emphasizing the place of Hasan and Husayn in Muhammad's family, ahl al-Bayt. Identity mediated through story ignited vigorous debates over the role of Urdu, and the utility of Persian- and Urdu-inflected dobhāṣī Bangla versus the formal standards of Sanskritic sādhu bhāṣā, including for the translation of the Qur'ān. This is a must read to understand the spirited literary legacy that still shapes contemporary sensibilities of what it means to be both Bengali and Muslim.

-Prof Tony K. Stewart, Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Chair in Humanities, Emeritus, Vanderbilt University, USA

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