Faridah Zaman is Associate Professor of the History of Britain and the World at the University of Oxford, and Fellow and Tutor of Modern History at Somerville College.
Professor Zaman has two main areas of research. The first concerns Muslim political activists, religious scholars, journalists and poets in early twentieth-century British India. Here, Prof Zaman explores the ways in which Muslim thought developed within the context of worldwide war, political revolution and imperial decline. Her work on this subject has appeared in Modern Intellectual History, South Asia, and the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. It will form the subject of her first monograph, The Young Muhammadans.
Prof Zaman’s second area of research concerns the relationship between the British left, imperialism and Islam in the twentieth century. Her first publication on this subject explored the place of sovereignty in socialist thought and appeared in Twentieth Century British History in 2022. To date, Prof Zaman’s work has also engaged with heritage and imperial visual culture, memory and nostalgia, travel and internationalism, and Muslim historiography in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and she has written for a wider audience via the Journal of the History of Ideas blog, the Fabian Review, and History Today.
Prof Zaman is broadly interested in supervising research projects that develop our understanding of Britain and its relationship to the wider world since 1750, particularly concerning the history of ideas.
Research Interests
- Political and intellectual history in global and imperial contexts
- The role of religion in the history of ideas
- The development of concepts around history and temporality
- Pan-Islamism and socialist internationalism
Academic Biography:
2015-2018 Dorothy and Gaylord Donnelley Postdoctoral Research Scholar, University of Chicago
2010-2014 PhD in History, University of Cambridge
2009-2010 MPhil in Historical Studies, University of Cambridge
2006-2009 BA in History, University of Cambridge