Qaum, Mulk, Sultanat: Citizenship and national belonging in Pakistan

Key information

Date
Time
5:00 pm to 7:00 pm
Venue
SOAS, University of London
Room
B103 (Brunei Gallery 1st Floor)

About this event

Join us for the launch of "Qaum, Mulk, Sultanat: Citizenship and National Belonging in Pakistan" by Ali Usmal Qasmi. This event will delve into the intricate development of citizenship and national identity in postcolonial Pakistan. 

About the book

After the trauma of mass violence and massive population movements around the partition of India and Pakistan in 1947, both new nation states faced the enormous challenge of creating new national narratives, symbols, and histories, as well as a new framework for their political life. While leadership in India claimed the anti-colonial movement, Gandhi, and a civilizational legacy in the subcontinent, the new political elite in Pakistan were faced with a more complex task: to carve out a separate and distinct Muslim history and political tradition from a millennium long history of cultural and religious interaction, mixing, and coexistence.

Drawing on a rich archive of diverse sources, Ali Qasmi traces the complex development of ideas of citizenship and national belonging in the postcolonial Muslim state, offering a nuanced and sweeping history of the country's formative period. Qasmi paints a rich picture of the long, arduous, and often conflict-ridden process of writing a democratic constitution of Pakistan, while simultaneously narrating the invention of a range of new rituals of state—such as the exact color of the flag, the precise date of birth of the national poet of Pakistan, and the observation of Eid as a "national festival"—providing an illuminating analysis of the practices of being Pakistani, and a new portrait of Muslim history in the subcontinent.

About the Author

Ali Usman Qasmi is Associate Professor of History at Lahore University of Management Sciences. He has published extensively in reputed academic journals such as Modern Asian Studies and Journal of Islamic Studies. He is the author of Questioning the Authority of the Past: The Ahl al-Qur’an Movements in the Punjab (Karachi: Oxford University Press, 2011). His second monograph, The Ahmadis and the Politics of Religious Exclusion in Pakistan (London: Anthem Press, 2014), was the recipient of Karachi Literature Festival (KLF) Peace Prize in 2015. 

Dr. Qasmi has co-edited several edited volumes as well, which include Revisioning Iqbal as a Poet and Muslim Political Thinker (Heidelberg: Draupadi, 2010), The Shi‘a in Modern South Asia: Religion, History and Politics (New Delhi: Cambridge University Press, 2015) and Muslims against the Muslim League: Critiques of the Ideas of Pakistan (New Delhi: Cambridge University Press, 2017).

The event is organised by SOAS South Asia Institute & Bloomsbury Pakistan. 
Bloomsbury Pakistan facilities academic research on Pakistan and publishes reviews of academic books relevant to Pakistan within its present borders or of the communities of South Asia where the work is broadly relevant to Pakistan.

Image credit: Hamid Roshaan via unsplash