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Zulfikar Hirji

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Zulfikar Hirji is associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at York University, Toronto in Canada. He is interested in how human societies articulate, represent and perform understanding of self, community and other and on issue of knowledge production, representation and identity, visual, material and sensory culture and critical pedagogy. His research focuses on Muslim societies in a range historical and contemporary contexts, particular around the Indian ocean.[1]

Education Background

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  • In 2002 Zulfikar Hirji acquired a Doctorate degree of Philosophy(DPhil) at university of oxford, institute of social and cultural anthropology.[2]
  • in 1997 he acquired a Master degree of Philosophy at the university of Cambridge faculty of oriental studies, department of Islamic studies.
  • 1989 he got a Bachelor degree in Art(Joint Honors), MacGill university, faculty of art, department of religious studies and anthropology.

Awards

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  • in 2024-2025 he was awarded a York Massey fellowship
  • in 2015-2016 he was awarded a York fellow at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies: Distinguished Visiting Scholar

Selected Works

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Further Reading

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  • A Corpus of Illuminated Qur’ans from Coastal East Africa, Journal of Islamic Manuscripts 14:2-4, 2023, 356-395. This article examines a little-known corpus of illuminated Qurʾān manuscripts that were produced between ca. 1750–ca. 1850 in the Swahili city-states of Pate, Siyu, and Faza on Pate Island in the Lamu archipelago (Kenya). Now dispersed in collections in Kenya, Tanzania, Oman, the UK, and the USA, the manuscripts have many distinctive features: decorative frontispieces, sūra titles, basmalas, and division and prostration markers; locally developed Arabic script styles; colophons containing names of copyists and completion dates; endowment dedications; northern Italian-made paper; and, blind-stamped, leather covers. The list of known manuscripts presented in the appendix is aimed at encouraging the identification, digitization, and study of other manuscripts in the corpus. The study of their content, materiality, and contexts of production can advance scholarship on the histories of Islamic manuscript production in coastal East Africa and provide comparative material for manuscript studies in other regions of Eastern Africa and the Indian Ocean.
  • The Faza Qur'an: Three Nineteenth-Century Illuminated Manuscripts from Coastal East Africa, Journal of Qur'anic Studies, 2022, 24:2, 21-47. This article concerns three illuminated Qur’an manuscripts that were produced in coastal East Africa in the first half of the nineteenth century. Two of the manuscripts are currently located in collections in Oman and the third is in a collection in Zanzibar, Tanzania. Analysis shows that these manuscripts comprise three parts of a four-part Qur’an that was copied by ʿAbd al-Karīm b. ʿUmar al-Nawfalī (d. 1274/1857) in Faza, a town located on Pate Island in the Lamu archipelago in Kenya. The article describes the three Faza manuscripts and, using colophon evidence and external sources, situates the copyist and the manuscripts in their historical context. The article also provides a summary of the academic study of illuminated Qur’an manuscripts from coastal East Africa to date and provides a list of these manuscripts.[1]
  • The Siyu Qur’ans: Illuminated Qur’an Manuscripts from Coastal East Africa,” in Approaches to the Qur’an in Sub-Saharan Africa, Z. Hirji (ed.), Oxford University Press (Oxford, UK), pp. 431-72. 41 pages

References

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  1. ^ a b "Zulfikar Hirji". Retrieved 2024-09-11.
  2. ^ "zhirji | Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies". profiles.laps.yorku.ca. 2018-05-24. Retrieved 2024-09-11.
  3. ^ Daftary, Farhad; Hirji, Zulfikar Amir (2008). The Ismailis: An Illustrated History. Azimuth Editions. ISBN 978-1-898592-26-6.
  4. ^ "Islam: An Illustrated Journey". www.iis.ac.uk. Retrieved 2024-09-12.
  5. ^ Hirji, Zulfikar (2010-07-30). Diversity and Pluralism in Islam: Historical and Contemporary Discourses Amongst Muslims. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-0-85771-216-5.
  6. ^ Hirji, Zulfikar. "Approaches to the Qur'an in sub-sahara Africa". global.oup.com. Retrieved 2024-09-12.