
New Books in Middle Eastern Studies Faisal Devji, "Waning Crescent: The Rise and Fall of Global Islam" (Yale UP, 2025)
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Nov 22, 2025 Faisal Devji, an Oxford historian specializing in modern Islam, dives into his book, Waning Crescent, exploring Islam's evolution as a global historical actor. He discusses how the 19th-century crisis of Muslim sovereignty reshaped the perception of Islam, liberating ordinary Muslims from traditional authorities. Devji also analyzes the emergence of modern 'idols' like nationalism and the implications of viewing Muhammad as a mortal figure. Additionally, he addresses how women symbolize this new anti-political Muslim identity and emphasizes the need for historians to broaden their focus.
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Islam As A Modern Historical Actor
- Islam became a global historical subject in the 19th century when it was imagined as an actor separate from kings and clerics.
- This abstraction allowed new lay actors to claim Islam while leaving it ungrounded institutionally.
Abstraction Creates New Idols
- Once Islam was imagined as a civilizational or ideological system it competed with other abstractions like nationalism and communism.
- This shift converted theological rivals into modern 'idols' that Islamists attacked as forms of idolatry.
Sovereignty Recast And Its Consequences
- Expelling God from political debate made sovereignty a contested, often Schmittian, concept in Islamist thought.
- Maududi's move to vest sovereignty in God paradoxically opened space for extra-constitutional returns of power like military coups.






