Putting Islam to Work |
![]() | Preface |
A Note on Transliteration |
Acknowledgments |
![]() | I |
![]() | 1. Creating an Object |
![]() | II |
![]() | 2. Education and the Management of Populations |
• | Schooling and the Colonial Project |
• | Exoticizing the Classroom |
• | Furnishing Children for the Schools |
• | Education and British Colonial Policy, 1882–1922 |
• | Moral Order: The Primitive Conception of the Teacher |
• | See-sawing Backwards and Forwards the Whole Time |
• | Public Order: The Best Way of Keeping These People Quiet |
• | The Regeneration of the Arab |
• | Wild Fanatics and Impostors |
• | Work: The Observation of Facts |
• | Women: An Educated and Enlightened Motherhood |
• | Conclusion |
• | Notes |
![]() | 3. The Progressive Policy of the Government |
![]() | III |
![]() | 4. Learning about God |
![]() | 5. The Path of Clarification |
![]() | 6. Growing Up: Four Stories |
![]() | IV |
![]() | 7. State of Emergency |
![]() | 8. Broken Boundaries and the Politics of Fear |
![]() | Bibliography |