Tag: Borderland

Australian Muslim Women’s Borderland Subjectivities Diverse Identities, Diverse Experiences


Free Download Lütfiye Ali, "Australian Muslim Women’s Borderland Subjectivities: Diverse Identities, Diverse Experiences"
English | ISBN: 3031451856 | 2024 | 227 pages | EPUB, PDF | 1114 KB + 3 MB
This book claims a discursive space in academic scholarship for knowledges and ways of knowing that capture the diversity, complexity and full humanness of Australian Muslim women’s subjectivities. It draws on in-depth conversational interviews with 20 Australian Muslim women from various ethnic backgrounds during which the women shared their experiences of being at the crossroads of their religious, gendered, racialised and ethnic identities. The book puts forward a decolonial feminist border methodology by weaving the work of decolonial feminist philosophers Maria Lugones and Gloria Anzaldúa with postmodern feminist thinking on subjectivity and with discourse analysis. This methodology is used to centre and attend to the fluidity and plurality of Muslim women’s subjectivities, at the intersections of race, ethnicity, patriarchy, gender, sexuality and Islam.

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Kingship and Polity on the Himalayan Borderland Rajput Identity during the Early Colonial Encounter


Free Download Arik Moran, Willem van Schendel, Tina Harris, "Kingship and Polity on the Himalayan Borderland: Rajput Identity during the Early Colonial Encounter"
English | 2019 | pages: 249 | ISBN: 946298560X | PDF | 2,9 mb
Kingship and Polity on the Himalayan Borderland explores the modern transformation of state and society in the Indian Himalaya. Centred on three Rajput led-kingdoms during the transition to British rule (c. 1790-1840) and their interconnected histories, it demonstrates how border making practices engendered a modern reading of ‘tradition’ that informs communal identities to this day. Countering the common depiction of these states as all-male, caste-exclusive entities, it reveals the strong familial base of Rajput polity, wherein women ― and regent queens in particular ― played a key role alongside numerous non-Rajput groups. Drawing on rich archival records, rarely examined local histories, and nearly two decades of ethnographic research, it offers an alternative to the popular and scholarly discourses that developed with the rise of colonial knowledge. The analysis exposes the cardinal contribution of borderland spaces to the fabrication of group identities. This book will interest historians and anthropologists of South Asia and of the Himalaya, as well as scholars working on postcolonialism, gender, and historiography.

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