Mkuki Na Nyota Publishers

Swahili Muslim Publics and Postcolonial Experience

Sh 35,000

Author(s): Kai Kresse

Swahili Muslim Publics and Postcolonial Experience.
Swahili Muslim Publics and Postcolonial Experience is an exploration experience of Kenyan coastal Muslims. Focusing on Kenyan postcolonial history, Kai Kresse isolates the ideas that coastal Muslims have used to separate themselves from their “upcountry Christian” countrymen. Kresse looks back to key moments and key texts—pamphlets, newspapers, lectures, speeches, radio discussions—as a way to map out the postcolonial experience and how it is negotiated in the coastal Muslim community. On one level, this is a historical ethnography of how and why the content of public discussion matters so much to communities at particular points in time. Kresse shows how intellectual practices can lead to a regional understanding of the world and society. On another level, this ethnography of the postcolonial experience also reveals dimensions of intellectual practice in religious communities and thus provides a conceptual framework and intellectual practice.

About The Author.
KAI KRESSE is Professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology at Freie Universitaet Berlin, and Vice Director for Research at Leibniz Zentrum Moderner Orient (ZMO), Berlin. Before that, he was Associate Professor of African and Swahili Studies at Columbia University and Lecturer of Social Anthropology at the University of St. Andrews. He is the author of Philosophising in Mombasa: Knowledge, Islam, and Intellectual Practice on the Swahili Coast.

Dimensions 230 × 150 mm
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