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Sexual and Gender Diversity in the Muslim World: History, Law and Vernacular Knowledge

Hamzić, Vanja

Authors



Abstract

This book offers a path-breaking historical analysis of the discourses on sexual and gender diversity in, or related to, the Muslim world, as well as an ethnographic account of contemporary Muslims in Lahore, Pakistan, whose pluralist sexual and gender experience defies the disciplinary gaze of both international and state law. It provides a stellar mapping of Islamic jurisprudence, court practice and social developments in Muslim polities and the worlds around them, in reliance on extensive materials written across many centuries in numerous classical and contemporary languages. The central claim of this book is that careful examinations of the legal, social and political genealogies of the Islamic legal tradition (in as much as it addresses human sexual and gender difference) and European law (as expressed, in particular, in its manifold elaborations of human rights), although marred by multiple imperial/colonial projects, can ultimately reveal some salient patterns of insurrectionary vernacular knowledge and discursive practices. The ethnographic narrative of the book documents and interrogates some such practices, while the concomitantly pursued critical historical analysis provides a broader background for understanding their invaluable role. In sum, this book is a revolutionary account of diversity and resistance to hegemonic visions of the self and the communal in Muslim lifeworlds.

Citation

Hamzić, V. (2016). Sexual and Gender Diversity in the Muslim World: History, Law and Vernacular Knowledge. I.B. Tauris. https://doi.org/10.5040/9780755609147

Book Type Authored Book
Online Publication Date May 2, 2020
Publication Date Jan 25, 2016
Deposit Date Sep 10, 2017
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Series Title Islamic South Asia series
ISBN 9781784533328
DOI https://doi.org/10.5040/9780755609147
Keywords Islamic law, international human rights law, Mughal law, Pakistani law, Muslim sexual and gender diversity, khwajasara, hijra, vernacular knowledge, anthropology of South Asia, history of Islam, history of Muslims, Pakistan, legal anthropology, legal history
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755609147