Episodes

  • A People's History of Islam: Tales of Mystics, Pilgrims and the Ordinary by Dr Hassan Abbas
    Jan 26 2026

    Who writes Islamic history — empires and rulers, or ordinary believers?In this research seminar hosted by AMI on 14 January 2026, Dr Hassan Abbas presents insights from his forthcoming book project, A People’s History of Islam. Challenging state-centred and court-sponsored historiography, Dr Abbas explores Islam through the lived faith of pilgrims, mystics, poets, and everyday communities across centuries.Drawing on extensive travels to major pilgrimage sites — from Fez, Konya, and Baku to Lahore, Karbala, and Makkah — the seminar highlights how oral tradition, spirituality, and devotion preserve histories often absent from official archives. Dr Abbas also reflects on the role of mysticism alongside juridical tradition, the challenge of writing accessible yet rigorous scholarship, and the problem of sectarian framing in Western representations of Islam.Speaker:Dr Hassan Abbas is a Distinguished Professor of International Relations based in Washington, DC, and a Senior Advisor at Harvard University’s Project on Shi'ism and Global Affairs. He is the author of The Prophet’s Heir (Yale University Press) and several other widely cited works on Islam and global affairs.

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    41 mins
  • Why Are Shi‘as Still Mourning? Death, Muharram & Senses with Dr Babak Rahimi | Thinking Islam Ep. 11
    Jan 15 2026

    Can mourning become a pathway to the divine?

    Has the modern world sanitised death, and does Muharram insist we don’t look away?

    Drawing from his forthcoming book Senses of Mourning, Dr Babak Rahimi of UC San Diego asks a question many have wondered, but few have explored: why do Shi'as keep mourning? This episode reveals mourning not as passive grief but as active devotion, a technique for connecting to God through the body, the senses, and collective memory. We explore how modernity's devotion to pleasure has pushed death to the margins, how Muharram insists we confront what modern life conceals, and why the senses are not obstacles to the sacred but pathways toward it. From the festive dimensions of grief to the standardisation of ritual by state and digital platforms, this conversation moves through the space where philosophy meets performance, and where the body becomes a site of hope.

    Dr Babak Rahimi is an Associate Professor of Communication, Culture and Religion at UC San Diego, where he directs the Program for the Study of Religion and the Middle East Studies Program. His research focuses on sensory religion, public sphere theory, and the historical contexts of early modern Islamicate societies. He is the author of "Theatre-State" and "The Formation of the Early Modern Public Sphere in Iran" (Brill, 2011) and editor of "Performing Iran" (I.B. Tauris, 2021).

    Audio Chapters:

    0:00 – Highlights

    01:30 – Why Muharram Performances?

    5:50 – Mourning as Religiosity?

    18:06 – Mourning as Technique

    26:02 – Muharram as Festive Events

    36:01 – Role of Senses in Muharram Devotion

    46:14 – Panja and Symbolism

    51:00 – Memory as a Sense?

    57:00 – Gender and Muharram Performances

    59:50 – Self-Flagellation as Performance?

    1:06:40 – Muharram and the Other

    1:11:00 – Why Western Thinkers?

    1:19:40 – Modern World and the Sense of Smell

    1:24:27 – Digital and the Standardisation of Muharram Rituals

    1:38:28 – Thinking Islam Question


    📖 Get the Book: "Senses of Mourning" by Dr. Babak Rahimi

    🔗 Penn Press: https://www.pennpress.org/9781512828344/senses-of-mourning/

    🔗 Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Senses-Mourning-Moharram-Performances-Qajar/dp/1512828343

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    1 hr and 41 mins
  • Digital Spiritualism: A New Meaning to Religious Secularism in India by Dr Zairu Nisha
    Dec 31 2025

    Dr Nisha explores how digital technologies are reshaping religious life in contemporary India. Challenging the strict divide between the secular and the religious, she argues that digital media has given rise to new hybrid forms of belief, practice, and spiritual experience.

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    18 mins
  • Techno-Gnosticism for the Digital Age: AI, Transhumanism, and the Flight from Embodiment by Professor Michal Valčo
    Dec 31 2025

    This talk critically examines transhumanism and AI through the lens of Christian theological anthropology. Professor Valčo contrasts visions of technological “optimization” with religious understandings of embodiment, vulnerability, and communion, offering an alternative ethical vision for the digital future.

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    22 mins
  • Blue Notes and Black Codes: Womanism, Digital Faith, and the Algorithmic Future by Rev. Dr Shonda Nicole Gladden
    Dec 31 2025

    This talk centres Black women’s digital religious leadership through a Womanist lens. Rev. Dr Gladden explores how digital rituals, online worship, and algorithmic systems intersect with justice, creativity, and resilience in contemporary faith communities.

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    22 mins
  • Between the ‘Digital’ and the ‘Analogue’: Intergenerational Transformations within Muslim Communities by Professor Sariya Cheruvallil-Contractor
    Dec 31 2025

    Drawing on major UK and European research projects, this talk explores how digital spaces are reshaping Muslim religious authority, identity, and practice. Professor Cheruvallil-Contractor examines how different generations navigate faith across online and offline worlds.

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    22 mins
  • Re-making the Human Being according to the Transhumanist’s Image and Likeness by Rev. Ugochukwu Stophynus Anyanwu
    Dec 31 2025

    This presentation critiques transhumanist visions of remaking humanity through technology. Rev. Anyanwu examines how such ideas challenge religious understandings of human nature, divine providence, and moral limits in an age of rapid technological enhancement.

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    24 mins
  • Ethics, Human Nature and AI’s Challenge by Dr Rahul Kumar Maurya
    Dec 31 2025

    This talk explores how classical ethical traditions and religious philosophy can respond to the growing moral challenges posed by artificial intelligence. Drawing on Buddhist thought and contemporary philosophy, Dr Maurya examines whether AI threatens human agency and how ethical frameworks might help safeguard humanity in an increasingly automated world.

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    18 mins