Terrains of Exchange offers a bold new paradigm for understanding the expansion of Islam in the modern world. Through the model of religious economy, it traces the competition between Muslim, Christian and Hindu religious entrepreneurs that transformed Islam into a proselytizing global brand.
Drawing Indian, Arab, Iranian and Tatar Muslims together with Scottish missionaries and African-American converts, Nile Green brings to life the local sites of globalisation where Islam was repeatedly reinvented in modern times. Evoking terrains of exchange from Russiaâs imperial borderlands to the factories of Detroit and the ports of Japan, he casts a microhistorianâs eye on the innovative new Islams that emerged from these sites of contact.
Drawing on a multilingual range of materials, the book challenges the idea that globalisation has given rise to a unified âglobal Islam.â Instead, it reveals the forces behind the fracturing of Islam in the hands of feuding and fissiparous âreligious firmsâ.
Terrains of Exchange not only presents global history as Islamic history. It also reveals the forces of that history at work in the world today.