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    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2202</link>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 17 Apr 2026 23:59:18 GMT</pubDate>
    <dc:date>2026-04-17T23:59:18Z</dc:date>
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      <title>RITUAL AS COMMUNICATION AND RELIGIOUS MULTIPLICITY: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF IMAMBADA</title>
      <link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2545</link>
      <description>Title: RITUAL AS COMMUNICATION AND RELIGIOUS MULTIPLICITY: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF IMAMBADA
Authors: ALI, RASHID
Abstract: Abstract&#xD;
The thesis investigates mourning spaces of Shia Muslims called Imambada in North&#xD;
India as site of communication where a distinct dialogicity operates amidst diverse cultural and&#xD;
literary tropes. This site over centuries emerged as syncretic with the participation of people&#xD;
from other religious denominations of which lamentation poetry is classic example. As meeting&#xD;
ground of various religious faiths, Imambadas have the propensity to be transgressive,&#xD;
subversive and accommodative.&#xD;
The research accommodates various philosophical moorings of critical thinkers such as&#xD;
Habermas’ Public sphere, Walter Benjamin’s porosity, Mikhail Bakhtin’s carnivalesque and&#xD;
Victor Turner’s liminality as the conceptual craft to study these architectural spectacles into&#xD;
cultural and literary domains. Using ethnographic studies in ten cities of North and South India,&#xD;
the research asserts that much of the rituals of Imambadas are of recent origin shaped by the&#xD;
nobility after the decline of Mughal empire rooted in pre-Islamic pagan society, other&#xD;
Abrahmic faiths and Zoroastrianism. However, these architectural sites have transcended their&#xD;
own ‘heretic’ roots and emerged as the ‘preserver’ of multiplicity in a world which is strife&#xD;
ridden.&#xD;
The thesis argues that Urdu language which suffers invisibilisation at this critical&#xD;
political juncture, munificently thrives in Imambadas. On the other hand, the same language&#xD;
has increasingly become ‘hegemonic’ when it comes to engagement with other vernaculars in&#xD;
its ritualised setting. The fundamental question this research asks is in what ways Imambada&#xD;
ritual subverts its own aniconic basis to embark upon a tough journey of multiplicity. This&#xD;
argument is in tandem with what scholars like Talal Asad and Mahmood Mamdani have&#xD;
asserted in framing the question about secular formation. The thesis also argues that rituals and&#xD;
literary craft lie not in religions or priestly class but in transmission of rituals via class ridden&#xD;
statist formations which make the people of the rituals the basis of their survival.&#xD;
However, when people turn into reified rituals, they also go beyond their own governing&#xD;
edifice and construct new interpretations of their faith. While this is true of other religious&#xD;
denominations too. which may have deployment of pun and humour to transgress, Imambada&#xD;
rituals offer such innovations in a very solemn and sombre setting which makes it unique. With&#xD;
an interface of Sanskrit and Persian cosmopolis as encapsulated by Pollock and Eaton, the&#xD;
research brings various nuances of Imambadas’ history to a fresh scrutiny.</description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 01 Apr 2024 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <dc:date>2024-04-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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