Kids Library Home

Welcome to the Kids' Library!

Search for books, movies, music, magazines, and more.

     
Available items only
Print Material
Author Dilley, Roy, 1954-

Title Islamic and caste knowledge practices among Haalpulaaren in Senegal : between mosque and termite mound / R.M. Dilley.

Imprint Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press for the International African Institute, London, ©2004.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe Kansas Collection Harmon  297.0899632 D583i 2004    ---  Lib Use Only
Description xv, 270 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm.
text txt rdacontent
unmediated n rdamedia
volume nc rdacarrier
Series International African library ; 30
International African library ; 30.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents The Mosque and the termite mound -- Ranks and categories: the emergence of a Haalpulaar social division of labour -- Historical origins and social pedigrees of craftsmen and musicians: genealogies of power and knowledge of the wild -- The white and the black: ideology and the rise to dominance of the Islamic clerics -- Accommodationist Sufi Islam and rites of passage: tensions and ambiguities -- The witch-hunter and the marabout: competing domains of knowledge and power -- The power of the word: the oral and the written -- Islamic reformers, Islamists and the Muslim community.
Summary "This book examines in historical perspective the hitherto little-studied relationship between Islam and caste among the Haalpulaar'en of Senegal. The Islamic uprising of the 1770s, which established a class of Islamic clerics in positions of authority in the Senegal river valley, had long-term consequences for the social relations between clerics and caste groups. The book examines how at different historical junctures attempts were made to negotiate the equalitarian claims of a universalist faith with the expression of social differentiation lying at the heart of case inequality. While the existing literature focuses on those who established Islam within the region, this present work provides insights into how marginalised artisans, poets and musicians understood themselves and how they responded to a faith which had become the cornerstone of social prestige and status. It analyses the knowledge practices of clerics and of specialised craft groups, arguing that they are crucial for our understanding of social and cultural distinction. This involves a synthesis of historical sources and ethnography, and provides an innovative approach to the study of religious identity and specialist practitioners."--Jacket.
Subject Tukulor (African people) -- Religious life.
Tukulor (African people) -- Social conditions.
Islam -- Senegal.
Caste -- Senegal.
Caste. (OCoLC)fst00848395
Islam. (OCoLC)fst00979776
Senegal. (OCoLC)fst01204328
Added Author International African Institute.
ISBN 0748619909 (pbk.)
9780748619900 (pbk.)

 
    
Available items only