Annual Conference of the British Association for Islamic Studies
Monday 15th-Tuesday 16th May 2023
The Aga Khan University, Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations
10 Handyside Street, London, N1C 4DN
Conference Programme
Day 1: Monday 15 May
10.00 - 10.10: Words of Welcome (ACR)
Jonas Otterbeck (ISMC) and Fozia Bora (University of Leeds, Chair of the British Association for Islamic Studies)
10.10 - 11.20: Opening Keynote (ACR Lecture Theatre)
Professor Sarah Bowen Savant and the KITAB Project team (Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations)
'When will ChatGPT write my next book?’' How AI and Digital Methods are Changing Islamic Studies'
11.20-11.30: BRAIS - De Gruyter Prize Announcement (ACR Lecture Theatre)
11.30 – 12.00: Refreshments (Atrium)
12.00-13.30: Panel Session 1
Islamic Law: Constructing Meaning and Responding to Changing Contexts (Room 220)
Chair: Muhammad Mansur Ali (Cardiff University)
Elias Saba (Grinnell College) Evading the Canon: Al-Qarafi and His Furuq
Hatice Kubra Memis (University of Exeter) Understanding of Beginning of Human Life in Classical Islamic Jurists
Shahanaz Begum (University of Exeter) Meaning making in the formative period: Muḥammad b. Ḥasan al-Shaybānῑ and the role of language in law
Muslim Minorities and the State (Room 221)
Chair: Jonas Otterbeck (Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations)
Anika Kabani (University of Oxford) The Exclusionary Sovereign: Terrorism, Asylum, and Ambiguity in the U.S. Humanitarian Immigration System
Xiaokun Jiang (Utrecht University) Reshaping and Being Reshaped: The Active Adaption Strategy of Salafis in Xi’an, China
Egdunas Racius (Vytautas Magnus University) Institutional churchification of Islam in Eastern Europe
Daniel Vekony (Corvinus University of Budapest) State-sponsored illiberal academic knowledge production on Muslims and migration in Hungary
Muslim Interfaith and Intercultural Encounters (ACR)
Chair: Jon Hoover (University of Nottingham)
Saeko Yazaki (University of Glasgow) Forming knowledge of the Other: Modern Japanese encounter with Islam
Hina Khalid (University of Cambridge) Form Informs Us of the Formless: The Finite-Infinite Relation in the Thought of Muhammad Iqbal and Rabindranath Tagore
Sainulabdeen Mohammed Thameem (University of Birmingham) Interfaith Relations in Medieval Sri Lanka in the Eyes of Ibn Battūta (1304-1368)
Islamic Responses to the Economy: Dealing with the Nation State, Wealth and Capitalism (Room 219)
Chair: Haroon Sidat (Cardiff University)
Alena Kulinich (University of Oxford/Seoul National University) Debating wealth in 9th-century Baghdad: al-Muḥāsibī’s refutation of a wealthy learned man
Ahmad Fathan Aniq (McGill University) The political backdrop to Indonesia’s enactment of Islamic economic law
Sharaiz Chaudhry (University of Edinburgh) Islam and Capitalism: Towards developing an Islamic Liberation Theology to tackle economic inequality
Muhammad Zulkifly (Durham University) Islamic liberation theology and the hegemony of capital
Practicing Sufism: Spirituality, Rituals and Resistance in Modern Sufism (Room 216)
Chair: Gavin Picken (Hamad Bin Khalifa University)
Hafza Iqbal (Coventry University) Sufi Hybrids: an exploration of Sufism in contemporary Britain
Ramisha Rafique (Nottingham Trent University) Exploring the spiritual journey of the British Muslim flâneuse: the inner-Sufi
Khalid Alnassar (University of Glasgow) The Sufi Responses to the Salafi Refutational Arguments In Saudi Arabia
13.30-14.30: Lunch (Room 110)
14.30-16.00: Panel Session 2
Approaching the Qur’an: Historical and Contemporary Debates (Room 220)
Chair: Jaan Islam (University of Edinburgh)
Simon Loynes (University of Edinburgh) Revelation in the Qur'an
Aysenur Cam (Princeton University) An Approach to Environmentalism through a Qur’anic Epistemology of Divine Names
Younus Abdud Dayyan (University of Birmingham) The Contribution of Indian Scholars to Tafsīr in Non- Indian Language Arabic
Sheam Khan (University of Leicester) and Nayef Al-Shamari (Qatar University) Synonymy (tarāduf) or congruence (taṭābuq) ? The problem of denying synonymy in the Qur’ān
Islamic Knowledge in Sub Saharan Africa: Transmission, Authority and Epistemology (Room 219)
Chair: Ousmane Kane (Harvard University)
Hadiza Kere Abdulrahman (University of Lincoln) Lessons from the margins, an(other) way – Northern Nigeria’s Qur’anic Schools and pedagogical responses for alternative ways of knowing and being.
Ezgi Guner (University of Edinburgh) Politics of memory and the contested legacy of Abu Bakr Effendi
Haroon Leon Forde (Birkbeck/SOAS) The fate of Islamic education in Sudan under the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium 1900-14
Gafar Ibrahim (Nyala University, Centre for Darfur Heritage) Safeguarding Islamic manuscripts of the Darfur region of Sudan: An epistemological diplomatic analysis
Decolonising the Study of Islam: Institutional Visions, Practices, and Challenges (Room 221)
Chair: Dr Siti Sarah Muwahidah (University of Edinburgh)
Noorhaidi Hasan (Indonesia International Islamic University) Decentring Islamic Studies: Seeking an Academic Direction for Indonesian International Islamic University
Siti Sarah Muwahidah (University of Edinburgh) A ‘Decentring’ Approach to Studying the Globalised Muslim World
Kholoud Al-Ajarma (University of Edinburgh) Studying and Teaching Islam as Insider/Outsider in The Netherlands: Embracing Multiple Entanglements
The Dynamics and Evolution of Islam in Finland (Room 216)
Chair: Alyaa Ebiarry (University of Durham)
Aytan Bashirova (University of Helsinki) ‘What physicists cannot explain is already in the Qur’an’. Building bridges in search of reaffirmation of Muslimness.
Riina Sinisalo (University of Helsinki) Dimensions of Muslim place-making in Helsinki
Rahma Hersi (University of Eastern Finland) Finnish Somali Women’s Path to Higher Education- What are the religious /cultural obstacles they face in their Path?
Saila Kujanpää (University of Helsinki) Institutionalizing Islamic education in Finland: the case of IRE teacher education
What is Islamic Studies? European and North American Approaches to a Contested Field (ACR)
Chair: Philip Wood (ISMC)
Yasmin Ilkhani (Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations)
Philip Wood (Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations)
Sana Iqbal (Institute of for Ismaili Studies)
16.00-16.30: Refreshments (Atrium)
16.30-18.00: Panel Session 3
Theology, Philosophy and Nature: On Traditionalist, Arab and “foreign” Science in Early and Classical Kalām (ACR)
Chair: James Weaver (University of Zurich)
Omar Anchassi (University of Bern) Against Ptolemy? Cosmography in Early Kalām
Ignacio Sánchez (University of Warwick) The Parrot’s Speech and the Muʿtazila: The Ikhwān al-Ṣafāʾ’s Critique of the Mutakallimūn in The Case of Animals versus Man
James Weaver (University of Zurich) A clash of Cosmologies: Prophetic and “Foreign” Science in the Hands of some Theological Historians
Indonesian Muslims and the West: Diaspora, Residence, and the Reinvention of Identity (Room 216)
Chair: Kholoud Al-Ajarma (University of Edinburgh)
Zacky Umam (SOAS, University of London) Nahdlatul Ulama’s New Internationalism and Its Challenges
Yanwar Pribadi (Indonesian International Islamic University) The Dutch Chapter of the Nahdlatul Ulama: Indonesian Muslims in Constructing Religious Identity in the West
Zezen Mutaqin (Indonesian International Islamic University) Islamophobia and Indonesian Muslim Diaspora: Negotiation and Reinvention of Identity in the United States
The future of teaching in the Islamicate Digital Humanities: a Round Table Discussion (Room 220)
Chair: Mathew Barber (AKU-ISMC)
Over the last decade the field of Digital Humanities (DH) has grown enormously, especially in Islamic Studies. Areas such as historiography, manuscript studies and social and political science have been shaped by this transformation. The need to prepare future scholars to critically engage with digital research and use digital methodologies is felt acutely within various humanistic disciplines.
DH is rapidly becoming a part of the university curriculum and many institutions now organise their own dedicated courses. With much of teaching and research now being through digital means, it is time to reflect on DH teaching within our field. This is especially important as we face the rise of AI tools such as ChatGPT, which potentially threaten traditional approaches to evaluating student performance.
In this roundtable discussion we bring together specialists who are presently involved in delivering DH courses for an open and productive conversation about this exciting moment in teaching. We hope to bring the audience into this discussion, and hear from the varied experiences of BRAIS attendees.
Navigating Power and Otherness: Identity, Exclusion and Gender (Room 219)
Chair: Sharaiz Chaudhry (University of Edinburgh)
Laura Sani (Ayaan Institute) Multicultural perspectives in a monocultural environment: Female British Muslims navigating their religiosity in Bulgaria
Enrico Maria la Forgia (University of Padua) Islam as a reaction to exclusion: the re-discovery of Muslim identity among Arab immigrants' descendants in Marseille
Qudsia Mirza (University of East London) Partition, Justice and Abducted Women: Memorialisation in Pakistan
Lujain Getlawi (University of Edinburgh) Navigating Libyan Isms: Libyan women, Secularism and Islamism
Islamic Art & Architecture Across Time and Space (Room 110)
Chair: Hilary Kalmbach (University of Sussex)
Hamza El Fasiki (Craft Draft) The Tale of at-Tasṭīr—Moroccan Geometric Arts: Authenticity, Colonial Interference and Hybridity
Azadeh Sarjoughian (University of Birmingham) A “local” view on exotic (un)veiled women's bodies in contemporary art from the Middle East
Mohamed Gamal Abdelmonem (Nottingham Trent University) The British Mosque: The conceptualisation of the authenticity, modernity and socio-spatial practices of mosque architecture
Salafism, politics, and ‘authenticity’ across Muslim-majority and Muslim-minority contexts (Room 221)
Chair: Guy Eyre (Lancaster University/University of Edinburgh)
Iman Dawood (University of Cambridge) From “Salafi” to “Muslim”: The Politicization of British Salafism
Guy Eyre (Lancaster University/University of Edinburgh) Salafism, authenticity, and national belonging in Morocco
Azhar Majothi (University of Nottingham) The Return of the “Phantom” Wahhabi
Alessandra Bonci (Laval University) Ilmi Salafi Women in Tunisia after the Revolution: What Kind of Quietism?
18.00-19.00: Reception hosted by the Aga Khan University's Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations (Atrium)
18.30-19.30: Special Panel: Advice for Postgraduate and Early Career Researchers in Islamic Studies (ACR)
BRAIS is committed to supporting Postgraduate and Early Career Researchers as part of its focus on Equality, Diversity and Inclusion in Islamic Studies. In doing so, BRAIS aims to create an academic community that is both open and inclusive for those who are not yet established in their fields. We hope that this panel will be the beginning of many more initiatives to support the development of the next generation of scholars across the many sub-disciplines of Islamic studies.
Chair: Alyaa Ebbiary (Durham University/BRAIS EDI Officer)
Walaa Quisay (University of Edinburgh) Applying for postdoctoral fellowships
Sophie Gilliat-Ray (Cardiff University) Funding proposals and managing large research projects
Usaama Al-Azami (University of Oxford) Publishing as an Early Career Researcher
Louise Hutton (Edinburgh University Press) Advice from a Commissioning Editor
Day 2: Tuesday 16 May
10.00-11.30: Panel Session 4
Islamic Law in Theory and Practice: Modern Challenges and Approaches (ACR)
Chair: Muhammad Mansur Ali (Cardiff University)
Arwa Abahussain (Cardiff University) The Hermeneutics of Khaled Abou El Fadl's Concept of Renewal
Mariam Sheibani (Cambridge Muslim College) Licentiousness by Another Name? Secret Marriages Between Invalidity and Immorality
Umar Shareef (Georgetown University) The Marriage Crisis in Egypt: Restricting Verbal Divorce to the Courts
Yomna Helmy (University of Cambridge) Maqāṣid Discourse from Islamic Modernism to Theorising Authoritarianism
Mosque architecture & the changing paradigms of design, culture and perception (Room 216)
Chair: Mohamed Gamal Abdelmonem (Nottingham Trent University)
Majdi Faleh (Nottingham Trent University) This is Home Now: Contemporary British Mosques in Leicester, Manchester and Birmingham
Noha Hussein (Nottingham Trent University) Rereading The Dome of The Rock’s Earliest Quranic Inscriptions in the light of the Objectives Theory
Dijana Alic (University of new South Wales) Melbourne Grand Mosque: Building communities and faith
Nourelhoda Mazen (Nottingham Trent University) A Theoretical Foundation of Ornamentation in Mosque Architecture: A Historical Enquiry of Terminologies
Traditional Concepts, Contemporary Classrooms - Drawing from Islamic Educational Theory to meet the needs of young Muslims (Room 219)
Chair: Farah Ahmed (University of Cambridge)
Dina El Odessy (University of Oxford) and Farah Ahmed (University of Oxford) A systematic review of holistic Islamic education conceptual frameworks
Safaruk Chowdhury (Cambridge Muslim College) Assembling a Holistic Conceptual Framework for Education in Muslim Contexts based on an Islamic Worldview
Claire Alkouatli (Cambridge Muslim College) In Search of a Tawhid Methodology: Towards Constructing Paradigms for Islamic Educational Research
Farah Ahmed (University of Cambridge) Facilitating international teacher-research exchange in Islamic educational contexts through an online platform
Being Muslim in Britain: Personal and Institutional Responses (Room 220)
Chair: Shamim Miah (University of Huddersfield)
Sophie Gilliat-Ray (Cardiff University) The Sisters, the Imam, and his Wife: new perspectives on Muslim women in Britain
Riyaz Timol (Cardiff University) British Imams between Institutionalisation and Autonomy: A Conceptual Typology of Roles
Rabiha Hannan (University of Leeds) Muslim women, Islamic texts and Muslim discourses: The struggle for authenticity in the modern world
The Multiplicity of Muslim Belief: Negotiating Sectarian and Ideological Differences (Room 221)
Chair: Usaama Al-Azami (University of Oxford)
Mashal Saif (Clemson University) Between a Textual Archive and Oral History: Pakistani Shi'a 'Ulama's views on Politics and Sectarianism
Julia Katarina, (Islamic College of Advanced Studies) Arkan al-Islam: Pillar of Faith and Practice in Seven Denominations
Zhicheng Ye (SOAS, University of London) The Imams and their legendary disciples: figures, lineage and interactions between early Sufis and Shiites
Aseel Azab (Brown University) ‘Do what you can to keep the recitation of the Good Word Alive ’: Formation of Salafi Selves & Subjectivity in Contemporary Egypt
11.30-12.00: Refreshments (Atrium)
12.00-13.30: Panel Session 5
Towards Contemporary Theological Hadith and Sira Studies (ACR)
Chair: Besnik Sinani (Tübingen University)
Ruggero Vimercati Sanseverino (Tübingen University) The Hadith as transmitted testimony: Perspectives of a theological approach to hadith
Besnik Sinani (Tübingen University) The Theology of the Modern Understandings of the Sira: Hadith Sources, Reform, Tradition and Postcoloniality
Hossam Ouf (Tübingen University) Controversial Hadiths (mushkil al-ḥadīth) Revisited: The Hermeneutics of a Theological Understanding of Hadith
The ‘Muslim Question’: Micropolitics of Normalizing Islam and Muslims (Room 219)
Chair: Alexander Henley (Institute of Ismaili Studies)
Matt Sheedy (University of Bonn) Six or Eleven Theses on ‘Islamic’ and ‘Christian’ Terrorism in America
Martijn de Koning (Radboud University Nijmegen) Responsible Muslims and Normalizing Islam: Dutch Muslims and the Politics of Responsibility
Alexander Henley (Institute of Ismaili Studies) Normalization through Religious Representation: A Lebanese Druze Response to the ‘Muslim Question’
Aaron Hughes (University of Rochester) Respondent
Intercultural Entanglements: Unstaged Muslim-Jewish Encounters in Europe (Part 1) (Room 216)
Chair: Alyaa Ebiarry (University of Durham)
Yulia Egorova (University of Durham) ’This is What I Like about This Religion’: Solidarity and Ethics in Inter-community Dialogue
Arndt Emmerich (University of Heidelberg) In Search of Conviviality - Jewish-Muslim encounters in Frankfurt’s Bahnhofsviertel
Sami Everett (University of Southampton/Parkes Institute) Curating commonality: the French Museum of Immigration exhibition on Jewish and Muslim migration from North Africa to France
Ben Gidley (Birkbeck, University of London) Eating (with) the other? Muslims, Jews and shared food in urban Europe
The Importance of the Word: Manuscripts and Literature in the Islamic Past and Present (Room 221)
Chair: Walid Ghali (Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations)
David Vishanoff (University of Oklahoma) The Afterlife of an Ascetic Pseudo-Scripture: Methods and Motives for Mapping Complex Families of Manuscripts
Fozia Bora (University of Leeds) Beyond “genre”: literary variety and text preservation in Ibn Khallikān’s biographical dictionary
Gianluca Parolin (The Aga Khan University) From Fiqh Orthodoxy to Fictional Doxa: The Case for (Islamic) Law & Literature
The Path of the Mystic: Sufi Religious Thought (Room 220)
Chair: Saeko Yazaki (University of Glasgow)
Arief Arman (SOAS, University of London) When An Existentialist Meets a Sufi: Similarities and Differences of Existential and Religious Thought on Death
Gavin Picken (Hamad Bin Khalifa University) Traversing the Nexus of the Physical and the Metaphysical: Negotiating Travel and Travel Writing in Sufism
Jonas Otterbeck (Aga Khan University/Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations) For the love of the beloved: The creative use of Sufi tropes by Peter Murphy
Najam Abbas (Institute of Ismaili Studies) Rasikh’s Reflections on Mystic Metaphor of Jalaluddin Rumi
13.30-14.30: Lunch (Room 110)
14.30-16.00: Panel Session 6
Historical Debates in the Islamic Sciences: Developments and Refutations in Kalam and Hadith (ACR)
Chair: Omar Anchassi (University of Bern)
Usaama al-Azami (University of Oxford) Ibn Taymiyya, al-Dhahabi and the Attribution of al-Nasiha al-Dhahabiyya
Tariq Mir (SOAS, University of London) Taftāzānī and Metaphysics After Rāzī: Developments in Kalām Metaphysics in the Post-Mongol Islamic East
Belal Alabbas (Bristol University/Exeter University) Rationalising the Akhbār of the Imāms? Al-Ṭūsī (d. 460/1067) on the Theory of Twelver Hadith Criticism
Ramon Harvey (Cambridge Muslim College) Exploring an Islamic “Theological Turn” in Husserlian Phenomenology
Political Islam and the Nation State: Challenges, Responses and New Horizons (Room 220)
Chair: Sharaiz Chaudhry
Alina Alak (University of Vienna) Salafi-Jihadi Hermeneutics
Kassim Alsraiha (University of Cambridge) New Social Contract in The Gulf States?: The Thought of Contemporary Reformist Islamic Intellectuals
Jaan Islam (University of Edinburgh) Decolonial Jihadis? Jihadi-Salafism in Conversation with Critiques of Hegemony and the Modern State
Hussain Muhammad (University of Erfurt) ʿUlama, Pakistan and Politics: Islamist hermeneutics
Intercultural Entanglements: Unstaged Muslim-Jewish Encounters in Europe (Part 2) (Room 216)
Chair: Sami Everett (University of Southampton)
Alyaa Ebbiary (University of Durham) To address or to avoid? Israel-Palestine and Muslim-Jewish Relations in Manchester and beyond
Dekel Peretz (University of Heidelberg) The Politics of Music: Jewish-Muslim musical cooperations in Berlin
Elodie Druez (Sciences Politique Paris) Singing & dancing together: Jewish-Muslim Mediterranean commonalities
Daniella Shaw (Birkbeck, University of London) Local Muslim-Jewish Encounters: Religious Spaces in the London Borough of Barnet
Islam and Modernity: The Experience and Legacy of Colonialism in the Muslim World (Room 219)
Chair: Fozia Bora (University of Leeds)
Nia Deliana (International Islamic University of Indonesia) Global South Diplomacy: Coromandel Networks and Fluidity Between Sumatra and the Ottoman
Ahmed Arfaoui (University of Erlangen–Nuremberg) Malek Bennabi´s View Of Religion
Hafsa Kanjwal (Lafayette College) Islam, Solidarity and the Question of Kashmir
Diietrich Reetz (Freie Universität Berlin) Din wa Duniya – The binary of Religion and World in Muslim discourse in South Asia in its complex diversity
Shi’ism: Preserving and Recovering Memory, Adapting to New Challenges (Room 221)
Chair: Adam Ramadhan (Al-Mahdi Institute)
Amina Inloes (The Islamic College) Astrology in Twelver Shīʿī Ḥadīth
Imran Visram (University of Oxford) Sound recording technologies and the preservation of Indo-Ismaili Muslim gināns
Akif Tahiiev (Max Planck Institute) Dynamic Ijtihad in Shiism
Aslisho Qurboniev (AKU-ISMC) Tusi and his Ismaili writings: a reconsideration of the earliest revision of Akhlāq-i Nāṣirī – MS Punjab 1557
16.00-16.30: Refreshments (Atrium)
16.30-18.00: Closing Keynote (ACR)
Professor Ousmane Kane (Harvard University)
‘Decolonizing the Study of Islam in Africa’