
New Books in History Faisal Devji, "Waning Crescent: The Rise and Fall of Global Islam" (Yale UP, 2025)
Nov 22, 2025
Faisal Devji, an Oxford-based historian and theorist of modern Islam, delves into his latest work, exploring the evolution of Islam as a historical subject. He discusses how the 19th-century perception of Islam transformed it into a global actor, free from traditional authorities. Devji examines the implications of this shift, with modern ideologies acting as rivals to Islam. He also highlights the complexities surrounding contemporary movements and the distinction between personal faith and Islam's broader identity, providing insightful directions for future scholarship.
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Islam As A Historical Subject
- Islam became a global historical subject in the 19th century when it was separated from kings and clerics.
- This abstraction let Islam act as a civilization or later an ideology without institutional mediation.
Idols Replace Theological Agency
- Making Islam the subject of history displaced theological agency, subordinating figures like God and the Prophet.
- That vacancy enabled modern “idols” such as nationalism, monarchy, and communism to appear as Islam's rivals.
Blunt's Vision Of A Muslim-British Partnership
- Wilfrid Scawen Blunt imagined Islam as a global subject and urged a British-Muslim partnership to revive its agency.
- Muslim thinkers picked up his sociological framing, locating Islam's future in places like India and Southeast Asia.





