A review article based on three recent recent books on Boko Haram, all published in 2018 and based on sharply different disciplines/methodologies. The first, by Alexander Thurston, is a classical historiography; the second, by Michael Nwankpa and Abdulbasit Kassim, is a sourcebook of texts produced by the movement's leadership; the third, by Scott MacEachern, is a long-term history of violence in the Lake Chad based on a mixture of archaeological findings and ethnography. The article argues for the usefulness of the three as a journey in the multi-disciplinary field of studies on "Islam in Africa".

Reading on Boko Haram: A Journey in the Inter‐Disciplinary Study of Islam in Africa

Brigaglia, Andrea
2020-01-01

Abstract

A review article based on three recent recent books on Boko Haram, all published in 2018 and based on sharply different disciplines/methodologies. The first, by Alexander Thurston, is a classical historiography; the second, by Michael Nwankpa and Abdulbasit Kassim, is a sourcebook of texts produced by the movement's leadership; the third, by Scott MacEachern, is a long-term history of violence in the Lake Chad based on a mixture of archaeological findings and ethnography. The article argues for the usefulness of the three as a journey in the multi-disciplinary field of studies on "Islam in Africa".
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11574/193338
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