Waning Crescent: The Rise and Fall of Global Islam

FAISAL DEVJI is Beit Professor of Global and Imperial History and Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford.

Yale University Press (First printing, 2025)
280 pages including Index

RM156.00

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ISBN: 9780300276633 Product ID: 49212 Subjects: , , Sub-subjects: , , , ,
GTIN: 9780300276633
Brand: Yale University Press

Waning Crescent: The Rise and Fall of Global Islam is a compelling examination of the rise of Islam as a global historical actor. Until the nineteenth century, Islam was variously understood as a set of beliefs and practices. But after Muslims began to see their faith as an historical actor on the world stage, they needed to narrate Islam’s birth anew as well as to imagine its possible death. Faisal Devji argues that this change, sparked by the crisis of Muslim sovereignty in the age of European empire, provided a way of thinking about agency in a global context: an Islam liberated from the authority of kings and clerics had the potential to represent the human race itself as a newly empirical reality.

Ordinary Muslims, now recognized as the privileged representatives of Islam, were freed from traditional forms of Islamic authority. However, their conception of Islam as an impersonal actor in history meant that it could not be defined in either religious or political terms. Its existence as a civilizational and later ideological subject also deprived figures like God and the Prophet of their theological subjectivities while robbing the Muslim community of its political agency. Devji illuminates this history and explores its ramifications for the contemporary Muslim world.

Introduction

1. The Proper Name
2. A Prophet Disarmed
3. The Idols Return
4. Women on the Verge
5. Half in Love
6. Hollow Men

Conclusion
Notes
Index

Weight0.524 kg
Dimensions24 × 16.5 × 1.5 cm
Author(s)

Format

Hardback

Language

English

Publisher

Year Published

2025

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