But you don't look like a Muslim : essays on identity and culture
By: Jalil, Rakhshanda.
Publisher: Noida HarperCollins Publishers 2019Description: xiii, 223p.ISBN: 9789353026813.Subject(s): -- Muslims--Social conditions -- Muslims--Ethnic identity -- IndiaDDC classification: 297.0954 Summary: What does it mean to be Muslim in India? What does it mean to look like one’s religion? Does one’s faith determine how one is perceived? Is there a secular ideal one is supposed to live up to? Can people of different faiths have a shared culture, a shared identity? India has, since time immemorial, been plural, multi-cultural, multi-ethnic and multi-lingual, where various streams have fed into and strengthened each other, and where dissimilarities have always been a cause for rejoicing rather than strife. These writings, on and about being Muslim in India, by Rakhshanda Jalil – one of the country’s foremost literary historians and cultural commentators – excavate memories, interrogate dilemmas, and rediscover and celebrate a nation and its syncretic culture. But You Don’t Look Like a Muslim is a book that every thinking Indian must read.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | NASSDOC Library | 297.0954 JAL-B (Browse shelf) | Available | 50473 |
Browsing NASSDOC Library Shelves Close shelf browser
297.09254 HAS-M Moderate or militant: images of India's muslims | 297.095 ROU- Routledge handbook on Islam in Asia / | 297.0954 ISL- Islam in South Asia: negotiating diversities | 297.0954 JAL-B But you don't look like a Muslim | 297.0954 RAZ-B भारतीय इस्लामी संस्कृति / | 297.0954 REE-I Islam in the public sphere: religious groups in India 1900-1947 | 297.0954078 ROB-I Islam, south Asia, and the west |
What does it mean to be Muslim in India? What does it mean to look like one’s religion? Does one’s faith determine how one is perceived? Is there a secular ideal one is supposed to live up to? Can people of different faiths have a shared culture, a shared identity? India has, since time immemorial, been plural, multi-cultural, multi-ethnic and multi-lingual, where various streams have fed into and strengthened each other, and where dissimilarities have always been a cause for rejoicing rather than strife. These writings, on and about being Muslim in India, by Rakhshanda Jalil – one of the country’s foremost literary historians and cultural commentators – excavate memories, interrogate dilemmas, and rediscover and celebrate a nation and its syncretic culture. But You Don’t Look Like a Muslim is a book that every thinking Indian must read.
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