Pathways to Pakistan: Race, Religion, and Orientalism

  • Date in the past
  • Wednesday, 27. November 2024, 16:15 - 17:45
  • SAI, Building 4130, Room 130.00.03
    • Maria-Magdalena Pruß - Freie Universität Berlin

The history of the Pakistan movement, whose sustained political agitation led to the creation of a new nation-state in South Asia in 1947, is often told as a story of Muslim religious separatism. In this talk, I offer a critical re-reading of early conceptualizations of “Pakistan” and explore the broader intellectual climate that formed the backdrop for such imaginations of a Muslim homeland in South Asia. Drawing on recent research, I argue that ideas about Muslim political subjectivity and nationhood were not so much informed by the Islamic tradition, but rather by European and American racial theories, the essentialization of religious identities, and Orientalist interpretations of Islamic and South Asian history.

Crescent, Islamia College for Men, Lahore, April 1939. (Archive: Government Islamia College, Lahore, Pakistan) History Department
  • Address

    SAI, Building 4130, Room 130.00.03

  • Event Type

All Dates of the Event 'History Department - Colloquium Winter Semester 2024-25'