Muslims and the Making of Modern Europe

Author: Emily Greble
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year of Publication: 2022
Print Length: 360 pages
Genre: Non-Fiction / History, Social Science
Area: Southern Europe, Eastern and Central Europe, The Balkans, Ottoman Empire, Yugoslavia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Russia
Topic: The Muslim World, Muslim, Islam, Asylum, Community, Culture & Society, History, Identity, Citizenship, Nation-Building & Nationhood, Minority Rights, Secularism
Muslims and the Making of Modern Europe shows that Muslims were citizens of modern Europe from its beginning and, in the process, rethinks Europe itself.
Muslims are neither newcomers nor outsiders in Europe. In the twentieth century, they have been central to the continent’s political development and the evolution of its traditions of equality and law.
From 1878 into the period following World War II, over a million Ottoman Muslims became citizens of new European states. In Muslims and the Making of Modern Europe, Emily Greble follows the fortunes and misfortunes of several generations of these indigenous men, women and children; merchants, peasants, and landowners; muftis and preachers; teachers and students; believers and non-believers from seaside port towns on the shores of the Adriatic to mountainous villages in the Balkans.
Drawing on a wide range of archives from government ministries in state capitals to madrasas in provincial towns, Greble uncovers Muslims’ negotiations with state authorities—over the boundaries of Islamic law, the nature of religious freedom, and the meaning of minority rights. She shows how their story is Europe’s story: Muslims navigated the continent’s turbulent passage from imperial order through the interwar political experiments of liberal democracy and authoritarianism to the ideological programs of fascism, socialism, and communism. In doing so, they shaped the grand narratives upon which so much of Europe’s fractious present now rests.
Muslims and the Making of Modern Europe offers a striking new account of the history of citizenship and nation-building, the emergence of minority rights, and the character of secularism.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Glossary of Islamic Terms
List of Foreign Place Names
Introduction
Part I. The Long Post-Ottoman Transition, 1878-1921
1. Muslim Rights and Political Belonging After the Congress of Berlin
2. Confessional Sovereignty and the Formation of a Muslim Legal Other
3. Survival and Autonomy: Lessons of the Balkan Wars and the First World War
4. Second- or Third-Class Citizens: Becoming Minorities after World War I
Part II. Yugoslav Experiments in Nation-Building, 1918-1941
5. The Shari’a Mandate and Yugoslav Nation-Building
6. “The Bonfire ot Muslim Unity”: Muslim Politics and the Crisis of Yugoslav Democracy
7. Islamic Legal Revivalism and the Crisis of Europe
Part III. War and Political Reordering, 1941-1949
8. “Back to Islam!”: The Promise and Possibility of Hitler’s Europe
9. The Eradication of the Shari’a Legal Order in Tito’s Yugoslavia
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Emily Greble is an historian of the Balkans and Eastern Europe. Her research interests include law and society, Islam in Europe, civil conflict, and local responses to socialism. Greble’s first book, Sarajevo, 1941-1945: Muslims, Christians, and Jews in Hitler’s Europe (Cornell, 2011) examines the persistence of institutions and networks in the city of Sarajevo under Nazi occupation during the Second World War. Her second book, Muslims and the Making of Modern Europe (Oxford, 2021), traces the stories of several generations of local Muslim men, women, and children living in southeastern Europe from the 1880s to the 1940s, illuminating how Muslim histories are European histories and how Muslims helped shape modern states and societies, laws, and the European project. The book won the Rothschild Harriman Book Prize, the George Louis Beer Prize, the Laura Shannon silver medal, an honorable mention from the Southern Conference for Slavic Studies, and the inaugural Fikret Karčić Book Prize. It was also named a best book in History by the Financial Times for 2022 and is being translated into Bosnian and Arabic.
Source: https://as.vanderbilt.edu/history/bio/emily-greble/
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