Before Islamic Finance: Muslim Banking in South Asia and the World, 1880-1975
Image: Sood Mand, Delhi (Shumara Number-002), detail. (1926) - Public domain.
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In this webinar event, Dr Mike O'Sullivan (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) examines the varieties of, and challenges to, Muslim private banking in colonial and postcolonial South Asia. It studies this phenomenon against the backdrop of two processes: The first, are the parallel efforts by Muslim communities in North Africa and Eurasia to develop their own banks. The second, the economic experiences of South Asian Muslims living under colonial rule. That experience was marked by intra-Muslim economic stratification, a strong showing in trade and industry, but a poor performance in banking, the rise of Islamic economics as an academic discipline, and the gradual shift of regulatory environments from colonial to postcolonial law. In a more general sense, by centring South Asia as a site for producing novel forms of finance, the talk reflects on how we can write histories of financialisation outside the 'capitals of capital.'
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The ANU Capitalism Studies Network presents this event with the support of the ANU School of History and the ANU Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies -CAIS. For enquiries contact Dr Aditya Balasubramanian (ANU School of History).
Dr Mike O'Sullivan is an Assistant Professor of South Asian History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Senior Research Fellow for CAPASIA, an ERC project based at EUI in Florence, Italy.
Dr. Aditya Balasubramanian is a Senior Lecturer in History at ANU.
This event is originally published on the School of History website.
Location
Virtual
Speaker
- Dr Mike O'Sullivan
Contact
- Aditya Balasubramanian