From Wakīl to Numā’indah

Eve Tignol
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Abstract

This article explores the (contested) concept of political representation in Urdu during the colonial period to address “deceptive familiarities” and highlight multilingual and transnational influences on contemporary Indian Muslim claims. Drawing on official documents, letters, speeches, and newspapers from the late 1850s to 1919, it argues that the “politics of presence”—or descriptive representation—of “Old Party” leaders stemmed from their aristocratic concept of representation as trusteeship (wakālat). Despite changes in terminology, the concept was only challenged in the 1910s by the “Young Party” and by the embracing of democratic values. Conceptual change was then materialized by the appropriation of the Persian numā’indagī in Urdu—a term that might have consecutively accredited descriptive claims and the use of religious symbols in election campaigns.
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从时间对Numālī”美丽
本文探讨了殖民时期乌尔都语政治代表的(有争议的)概念,以解决“欺骗性熟悉”问题,并强调当代印度穆斯林主张的多语言和跨国影响。根据19世纪50年代末至1919年的官方文件、信件、演讲和报纸,作者认为“旧党”领导人的“在场政治”——或描述性代表——源于他们作为托管的代表的贵族概念(wakālat)。尽管术语发生了变化,但这个概念直到20世纪10年代才受到“青年党”和民主价值观的挑战。随后,乌尔都语中波斯语numi ā indagi ā的使用使概念上的变化成为现实——这个词可能连续地认可了描述性的主张,并在竞选活动中使用了宗教符号。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Contributions to the History of Concepts is no longer published by Brill from 2010.
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