The capital of the modern country of Burkina Faso remains the old city of Wagadugu (Ouagadougou), where horse races are still held in honour of Princess Yenenga, founder of the northern Mossi Kingdoms.
www.africanhistoryextra.com/p/the-mossi-...
Posts by Mubashir AK
Prof. Neeladri Bhattacharya's Memorial Speech in honour of historian Prof. K.N. Panikkar (26 April 1936 – 9 March 2026)
Salaam. I have a website now: pashamkhan.com
. I coded it by hand (with Eleventy), so you'd better like it. The 8th square will be for my page on Lord Rasgulla 😤✨
Any chance for the zoom options?
ETHICS AND THE SELF IN ISLAM Historical and Contemporary Conversations ABDULKADER TAYOB Editor FORTRESS PRESS Minneapolis
CONTENTS Introduction Abdulkader Tayob 1. Personhood in the Qur'an Investigating the Qur'anic Anthropology Chafik Graiguer 2. Autonomy in Islamic Legal Theory Shitib's Reflections on Norms, Moral Obligation, and Freedom Muhammad Khalid Masud and Abdulkader Tayob 3. Legal Racon as Relational Sofin lamic Lav 4. Selfhood and Moral Agency in Islamic Theological and Philosophical Traditions A Case Study Mariam Al-Attar and Nuha Alshaar S. The Soul's Symphony Ghazali and she Art of Self-Cultivation Ebrahim Moosa 6. Formulations of Saada in Classical Islamic Thought Felicity Between Philosophy and Sufism Cyrus Ali Zargar 7. Awakening of the Soul and Ethics in the Nagshbandi Sufi Tradition Muhammad Akram 8. The Mohammedan Social Reformer Crafting Reformed Muslim Subjects Nauman Faizi 9. Ethical Frontiers and the Religious Self Forms of Life and Hermeneutics of Islamic Hereticization Ali Qadir
10. Ethics in the Realist Idealism of the Rabat School Al-Fassi, Labbabi, and Taha Mohammed Hashas 11. "The Believer Does Not Humiliate Himself" The Ethics of Anti-Subordination and the Decolonization of Islamic Family Law Mohammad Fadel 12. Niyyar as Ethical, Reflexive Self Halal Practice, Opacity, and Ethical Epistemology Shaheed Tayob
New book coming from @fortresspress.bsky.social:
Ethics and the Self in Islam: Historical and Contemporary Conversations
With essays from @czargar.bsky.social, Saadia Yacoob, Ebrahim Moosa, Mohammad Fadel, Nuha Alshaar, and more, on topics ranging from Quranic anthropology to modern halal politics
NEW: Iran’s 1979 revolution promised to uplift the “oppressed.” Nearly five decades later, clerical cronyism and ideological obsessions have left millions poorer, angrier and more excluded than ever, reports Yeganeh Torbati for @newlinesmag.bsky.social newlinesmag.com/spotlight/th...
Displacement has become the force that shapes Gaza’s geography. Reading alongside Edward Said, Alaa Alqaisi gives shape to a life now permanently marked with loss.
“For Mughal emperors like Akbar and Jahangir, a tiger slain in the forest showed their dominance over nature and, more broadly, their imperial authority.”
My latest book, on open access!
Ottomans and the Supernatural: Nature and the Limits of Knowledge in the Early Modern Ottoman Empire url: academic.oup.com/book/61617
Max Weiss on Translating the Gaza Doctor’s Words for the Times, and the Paper’s Failure to Cover His Abduction and Torture
lithub.com/how-the-new-...
Absolutely cannot wait to see this come out next month. The editors - Asad Ahmed and his students at Berkeley - are doing groundbreaking work on the intellectual history of the Timurid/Mughal period...
resolve.cambridge.org/core/books/i...
my book, _Islamic Ethics and Spiritual Sovereignty: Genres of Tradition in Muslim South Asia_, will be published by @undpress.bsky.social in June 2026
i'm going through the proofs, and don't see any typos in the epilogue, so sharing this 3-page essay here
undpress.nd.edu/978026821090...
🗓️ "The Library of a Cairene Scholar at the Turn of the Seventeenth Century" ▶️ Dr Feras Krimsti and Professor Konrad Hirschler welcome Professor Adam Sabra (University of California, Santa Barbara) to the #GothaManuscriptTalks this time. www.uni-erfurt.de/en/universit...
The capture or rather kidnapping of Maduro is a blatant violation of the Constitution, international law and simple decency. The crudest imperialism: for no aim but the assertion of Presidential power.
Our editors reflect on 2025 as a “year of amnesia,” curating @newlinesmag.bsky.social
stories that revisit the wars, political shocks and humanitarian crises the world quickly moved past — and insisting they be remembered rather than buried by the next headline.
mailchi.mp/newlinesmag/...
DISSEMINATING AL-ANDALUS
Check out "Al-Andalus y la Historia", an online free journal with the voices of experts such as J. Albarrán, B. Catlos, A. García-Sanjuán, E. Cardoso, S. Kimmel, J. Bellver, G. Wiegers and much more
New English section thanks to Ann Christys.
www.alandalusylahistoria.com
Samy Ayoub
Jotwell Legal History latest:
Samy Ayoub, The Indispensable Nature of Islamic Legal Theory (reviewing Omar Farahat, Generality and Exception in Islamic Legal Theory: Intent, Language, and the Jurist’s Role, 20 Am. J. Compar. L. 1 (2024)), legalhist.jotwell.com/the-indispen....
Hi pls add me.
Lanzillo is keen to see labor history as a site for Islamic history. Pious Labor does so admirably through both method and content. As Lanzillo rightly underscores, the history of Islam in colonial India has largely been written through “an insistence on the primacy of canonical thinkers and texts” (17). Pious Labor elegantly portrays how artisans anchored their labor in Islamic pasts. Woodworkers traced their skills to the prophet Nuh (Noah); tailors to Idris (Enoch); blacksmiths to Dawud (David). Artisans often connected their trade and/or skill to Sufi pirs (guides/saints), as was the case with scribes and metalsmiths. By showing us an “artisanal Islam” in a range of contexts, the book effectively makes working- and lower-class histories integral to an understanding of Islam in South Asia. Pious Labor is refreshingly original in bringing histories of economy, labor, technology, and Islam into dialogue with one another, and it makes contributions to each of these fields of history. Additionally, by highlighting how Muslim artisans emphasized the Islamic origins of their trades and the pious nature of their labor and rendered new technologies as sources for their accumulation of social and cultural capital, Lanzillo makes a valuable contribution to the history of late colonial India.
Pious Labor (@ucpress.bsky.social ) reviewed in the AHR by @farinamir.bsky.social . I've been fortunate that the book has been read by several thoughtful and generous reviewers, and I'm especially thrilled to see this one.
academic.oup.com/ahr/article-...
🗃️
I am especially proud of the Dec 2025 issue of *CSSAAME* @dukepress.bsky.social with the special issue "Technologies of War* (edited by Madiha Tahir and Adrien Zakar) and the Kitabkhana on Hafsa Kanjwal's *Colonizing Kashmiri* (2024) <--free to read!
Photo of paragraph from Vikram Seth’s Two Lives
Lovely anecdote from Vikram Seth’s Two Lives where he discusses his German Jewish aunt crying after being served Marmite at the home of the famous Islamic studies scholar AJ Arberry where she worked after fleeing Berlin in 1939. #Marmite #Britishdelicacies
NEW: Across the Middle East, graffiti artists are claiming space and painting themselves back into the landscape, writes Ibrahim Absar for @newlinesmag.bsky.social
newlinesmag.com/essays/the-c...
Grateful for these kind and thoughtful recent reviews of my book from Finbarr Barry Flood and Usman Hamid in the Journal of Islamic Studies and in Medieval Encounters.
doi.org/10.1093/jis/...
brill.com/view/journal...
Thanks for sharing