Trajectories of Marginalisation
De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt Knife av Salman Rushdie (inbunden).
Köp båda 2 för 640 kr'This is certainly the best empirically-researched book on Muslims in contemporary India that I've read so far. It brilliantly highlights the magnitude of Muslim marginalisation in India, and the desperate need to address it.' * Yogi Sikand, author, Muslims In India Since 1947 and Bastions Of The Believers: Madrasas And Islamic Education In India * 'Laurent Gayer and Christophe Jaffrelot have assembled an impressive array of scholars to produce a fascinating portrait of the state of India's Muslim communities in various urban settings. The analyses in this volume are well-researched, offer new insights and provide a complex, and often disturbing, accounts of the state of Muslim communities across metropolitan India. The contributors to this work have eschewed facile generalisations, have provided fine-grained accounts and have displayed an admirable sensitivity to both historical as well as contemporary social forces that have helped define the current socio-economic and political conditions of India's most sizable minority in their urban milieus. This work will contribute much to addressing an important lacuna in the pertinent literature on the contemporary politics and status of India's Muslim minority.' * Sumit Ganguly Rabindranath Tagore Chair in Indian Cultures and Civilizations at Indiana University, Bloomington and Senior Fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia * 'Urban India, the locus of India's economic surge, is home to over a third of India's Muslims - and it is there that the diverse cultures of Muslim India once flourished. Yet today, India's urban Muslims are the most disprivileged of India's urban citizens and their life-chances are sharply constrained in every respect. In this pioneering set of political ethnographies, the predicament of Indian Muslims is examined across a dozen cities. Jaffrelot and Gayer's substantial volume at once illuminates empirical conditions and tests theories about ghettoisation, integration, and political attitudes of India's urban Muslims.' * Sunil Khilnani, Director, India Institute, King's College London * 'Jaffrelot's range of scholarship is amazing and his new book, Muslims in Indian Cities, co-edited with Laurent Gayer, illustrates well his wide-ranging interests. The contributions are instructive and insightful and cover a much-neglected theme in contemporary South Asia.' * Professor Mushirul Hasan, Director General, National Archives of India *
Laurent Gayer is Research Fellow at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), currently posted at the Centre de sciences humaines (CSH), Delhi. Christophe Jaffrelot is Director of CERI (Sciences Po, Paris) and the author of several acclaimed books on South Asia published by Hurst.