Professor Faisal Devji
I completed my PhD in Intellectual History at the University of Chicago in 1994. I was then elected Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows, after which I went on to run the graduate program at the Institute of Ismaili Studies in London, which included schools in Tajikistan and Iran. Returning to regular academic life in 2003, I taught for two years at Yale as a visiting lecturer and another four at The New School for Social Research in New York as Associate Professor, arriving in Oxford as Reader in Modern South Asian History in 2009.
Research Interests
I am interested in the intellectual history and political thought of modern South Asia as well as in the emergence of Islam as a global category. In my research I have focussed on the cultural and philosophical meanings of violence as much as the emergence of non-violence as a political project. I am also very interested in the different ways in which the idea of humanity achieves political realty, particularly as the simultaneous subject and object of globalisation. My recent work deals with efforts to think beyond the nation-state and the inheritance of anarchism in the post-colonial world.
Featured Publications
The Impossible Indian: Gandhi and the Temptation of Violence (Harvard, 2012)
In the Media
From Xinjiang to Germany: how did Islamophobia become a global phenomenon?
How Caste Underpins the Blasphemy Crisis in Pakistan
Jamal Khashoggi and the Competing Versions of Islam
Will Saudi Arabia Cease to be the Center of Islam?
Current DPhil Students
Teaching
I would like to hear from potential DPhil students regarding: Intellectual history, political thought, South Asia, Hinduism, Islam.
I currently teach:
Prelims |
FHS |
Indian special subject, "From Gandhi to Green Revolution" | |