Middle East Studies

Shahzad Bashir – India as a Sufi Timespace in the work of Jamali of Delhi

Friday, February 9, 2018

2 p.m. – 4 p.m.

Joukowsky Forum

Shahzad Bashir specializes in Islamic Studies with a particular interest in the intellectual and social histories of Iran and Central and South Asia circa fourteenth century CE to the present. His published work is concerned with the study of Sufism and Shi’ism, messianic movements originating in Islamic contexts, representation of corporeality in hagiographic texts and Persian miniature paintings, religious developments during the Timurid and Safavid periods, and modern transformations of Islamic societies. Bashir is currently working on two major projects. The first is a book entitled Islamic Pasts and Futures: Conceptual Explorations. This is a wide-ranging treatment that critiques the way Islamic history has been conceptualized in modern scholarship and suggests alternatives, with emphasis on the multiplicity of temporal configurations found in Islamic materials. The second project is tentatively entitled Building the Past: Memory, Metaphor, and Reality in Persianate Islamic Societies. This is a cultural history of an Islamic cosmopolitan arena based on assessing materials produced circa 1400-1600 CE that claim to represent the past. Both these projects engage contemporary academic debates regarding religion, language, historiography, and history on the basis of materials of Islamic provenance. Bashir's work has been supported by fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, the American Research Institute in Turkey, the Stanford Humanities Center, and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Most recently, he was named an inaugural Andrew F. Carnegie Fellow for the academic year 2015-16.

Commentator:
Ali Asani, Harvard University

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