Modernizing charity, remaking Islamic law

Item

Title
Modernizing charity, remaking Islamic law
Identifier
d_2009_2013:643907529689:11470
identifier
11903
Creator
Moumtaz, Nada,
Contributor
David Harvey
Date
2012
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Cultural anthropology | Islamic studies | Law | economy | property | religion | state | waqf
Abstract
Drawing on archival and ethnographic research in Lebanon and Turkey, this dissertation investigates changes in the conception and practice of Islamic charitable endowments -- called waqfs -- in Beirut since1826. In French Mandate Lebanon (1920-1943), a new question about charity emerged: how was one to distinguish when a charitable endowment was a truly religious act? I first trace how this question became imaginable starting in the nineteenth century Ottoman Empire, notably through the rise of the modern capitalist state, its monopoly on the production and administration of law, and the creation and separation of the spheres of religion and economy. I then argue that the selection of religious endowments hinged on new conceptions of the state and general benefit and upon a conception of charity as a practice confined to the public sphere. The answer to this question therefore subjected charitable endowments and their founders to new understandings of charity, property, and intent and redefined the very practice of charitable giving in the Islamic tradition afterwards and up to this day.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Anthropology