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Global Muslims in the Age of Steam and Print

James L. Gelvin (Editor), Nile Green (Editor)

Available worldwide

Paperback, 306 pages
ISBN: 9780520275027
January 2014
$34.95, £24.95
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The second half of the nineteenth century marks a watershed in human history. Railroads linked remote hinterlands with cities; overland and undersea cables connected distant continents. New and accessible print technologies made the wide dissemination of ideas possible; oceangoing steamers carried goods to distant markets and enabled the greatest long-distance migrations in recorded history.

In this volume, leading scholars of the Islamic world recount the enduring consequences these technological, economic, social, and cultural revolutions had on Muslim communities from North Africa to South Asia, the Indian Ocean and China. Drawing from a multiplicity of approaches and genres, from commodity history to biography and social network theory, the essays in Global Muslims in the Age of Steam and Print, 1850-1930 offer new and diverse perspectives on a transnational community in an era of global transformation.

James L. Gelvin is professor of history at UCLA and author of The Modern Middle East: A History (Oxford, 2011).

Nile Green is professor of history at UCLA and author of Bombay Islam: The Religious Economy of the West Indian Ocean, 1840-1915 (Cambridge, 2011).

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