Academic Article
Reinterpreting the Role of Muslims in the West African Middle Ages
- Hierarchies
-
Niger
- Publications islamiques (14 items)
- Al Maoulid Info (7 items)
- Al Maoulid Magazine (5 items)
- Al Maoulid Magazine (arabe) (2 items)
- Photographies (Niger) (1 item)
- Références (Niger) (211 items)
- Publications islamiques (14 items)
- Title
- Reinterpreting the Role of Muslims in the West African Middle Ages
- list of authors
- Mauro Nobili
- Abstract
- Recent research points to a renewed scholarly interest in the West African Middle Ages and the Sahelian imperial tradition. However, in these works only tangential attention is paid to the role of Muslims, and especially to clerical communities. This essay tackles theoretical and historiographical insights on the role of African Muslims in the era of the medieval empires and argues that the study of Islam in this region during the Middle Ages still suffers from undertheorizing. On the contrary, by using a ‘discursive approach’ scholars can unravel access to fascinating aspects of the history of West African Muslims and in particular to the crucial role played by clerical communities, who represented one node of the web of diffused authority which is characteristic of precolonial West African social and political structures.
- Journal
- The Journal of African History
- volume
- 61
- issue
- 3
- page start
- 327
- page end
- 340
- Date
- 2020
- Language
- Anglais
- Type
- Article de revue
- Subject
- history of Africa
- Sahel
- Islamic cleric
- empire
- Spatial Coverage
- Niger
Part of Reinterpreting the Role of Muslims in the West African Middle Ages