Bookshock Ask Tez ✨
The Changing World of a Bombay Muslim Community, 1870 - 1945 cover

The Changing World of a Bombay Muslim Community, 1870 - 1945

by Salima Tyabji

Lowest price on Bookshock
$44.51
1 offer
In stock

Ask Tez about this book →

This title is temporarily out of stock. Email support@bookshock.ai or call (972) 638-0790 and we'll let you know when it's back.
Free US shipping
30-day free returns
Stripe-secured checkout

All offers (1)

PriceConditionSeller
$44.51Best price New Basi6 International LLC

Stock and pricing refresh on page load. Tez can also compare prices on Amazon, AbeBooks, and ThriftBooks if you ask.

About this book

Muslims formed a disparate and unwieldy community in Bombay in the nineteenth century. The Islam that was professedly held in common by various groups could barely provide a sense of unity or cohesion to people so widely diverse in terms of language, customs, and also of forms and practices of belief. By the middle of the nineteenth century, a class of wealthy ship owners, ship-builders, and merchants, belonging to the varied communities that constituted the city, of which Muslims formed an important part, had emerged. This class was outward-looking, modern, and generally reformist in outlook: Gujarati or Maharashtrian, its goals of social reform, education, as well as political awareness, were gradually beginning to be perceived as goals held across communities, and increasingly across different regions. The questions that were being raised in the social turmoil of the period amongst Hindus were over issues of female education, the age of marriage, widow remarriage, and female seclusion. These issues were not foreign to the Muslim community; and the part played by Muslim leaders in Bombay in discussing and negotiating them was not an insignificant one, taking into account the size and relative backwardness of the community. Within this context, this book traces the evolving identity of a Bombay family and its changing social and political views in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, using three main sources: their family journals, an individual memoir/journal, and letters written home from Europe.

Details

Format
Hardcover
Pages
358
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Language
EN
ISBN-13
9780192869746
ISBN-10
0192869744

Categories

History, Asia, Modern, Social History