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Islamic Law on Trial: Contesting Colonial Power in British India

Islamic Law on Trial: Contesting Colonial Power in British India

Paperback

General Racism & Ethnic Studies

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ISBN10: 0520396383
ISBN13: 9780520396388
Publisher: University of California Press
Pages: 263
Language: English
Prior to the East India Company's establishment in India in 1661, Islamic law was widely applied by the Mughal Empire. But as the Company's power grew, it established a court system intended to limit Islamic law. Following the Great Rebellion of 1857, the decentralized Islamic legal system was replaced with a new standardized system. Islamic Law on Trial interrogates the project of juridical colonization and demonstrates that alongside--and despite--the violent displacement of Muslim legal sovereignty, Muslims were able to engage with and even champion Islamic law from inside the colonial judiciary. The outcome of their work was a paradoxical legal terrain that appeared legitimate to both Muslim practitioners and English colonizers. Sohaira Siddiqui challenges long-standing assumptions about Islamic law under British rule, the ways in which colonial power displaced preexisting traditions, and how local Muslim elites navigated the new institutions imposed upon them.

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Siddiqui, Sohaira Z. M.

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General Racism & Ethnic Studies