Event



Bazaar: Markets and the Making of the Muslim World with Fahad Bishara

Annenberg Seminar
- | College Hall 209

Bazaar: Markets and the Making of the Muslim World

Fahad Ahmad Bishara
Associate Professor, Indian Ocean History; Rouhollah Ramazani Associate Professor of Arabian Peninsula and Gulf Studies

 

Fahad Bishara specialize in the economic and legal history of the Indian Ocean and Islamic world. His first book, A Sea of Debt: Law and Economic Life in the Western Indian Ocean, 1780-1950 (Cambridge University Press, 2017) is a legal history of economic life in the Western Indian Ocean, told through the story of the Arab and Indian settlement and commercialization of East Africa during the nineteenth century. It was the recipient of the J. Willard Hurst Prize (awarded by the Law and Society Association), the Jerry Bentley prize (awarded by the World History Association), and the Peter Gonville Stein book award (given by the American Society for Legal History). His second book, Monsoon Voyagers: An Indian Ocean History (forthcoming, University of California Press) tells a connected history of the Gulf and Indian Ocean from the deck of a twentieth-century dhow, drawing on the archives of a number of merchant and dhow captain families from Kuwait. The project, a microhistory that unfolds over a broad canvas, takes on issues of global capitalism, international law, empire, and mobility in historical writing.

Paper available here.