Michel Boivin
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Michel Boivin is a French
historian A historian is a person who studies and writes about the past and is regarded as an authority on it. Historians are concerned with the continuous, methodical narrative and research of past events as relating to the human race; as well as the stu ...
and
anthropologist An anthropologist is a person engaged in the practice of anthropology. Anthropology is the study of aspects of humans within past and present societies. Social anthropology, cultural anthropology and philosophical anthropology study the norms and ...
who specializes in South Asia. Trained in contemporary history, Islamic studies and ethnology, he is currently Emeritus Director of Research at the
Centre national de la recherche scientifique The French National Centre for Scientific Research (french: link=no, Centre national de la recherche scientifique, CNRS) is the French state research organisation and is the largest fundamental science Basic research, also called pure research o ...
(CNRS: French National Center for Scientific Research) and a member of the CESAH (Centre for the Study of South Asia and the Himalayas), former CEIAS (Center for South Asian Studies) at the
School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences The School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (french: École des hautes études en sciences sociales; EHESS) is a graduate ''grande école'' and ''grand établissement'' in Paris focused on academic research in the social sciences. The ...
(EHESS). He had taught at the Université de Savoie Mont Blanc, at Sciences Po Lyon, as well as at The Catholic University of Lyon. He has co-directed three seminars at the EHESS: "History and Anthropology of the Muslim Societies of South Asia", "Authority and Politics in the Sufism of South and Central Asia", and "Material Culture and devotion among the Shia societies". In addition, he contributed to the organization of two CEIAS research groups: "Vernacular Cultures and New Muslim Elites", with Julien Levesque, and "Gujarati and Sindhi Studies: Societies, Languages and Cultures", with Pierre Lachaier.


Biography

After studying at Chambéry high school with an emphasis in the humanities, Michel Boivin became an expert on the Modern history of the Muslim world. He holds a DEA in Arabic and Islamic studies from the Université Lyon 2, and obtained a doctorat in Oriental Languages, Civilizations and Societies from the Université Paris 3-Sorbonne Nouvelle on Isma’ilian Shi’ism and Modernity in Sultân Muhammad Shâh Aghâ Khân (1877–1957), and then an habilitation thesis in ethnology from the Université Paris Ouest-Nanterre, on the topic of Shi’ism, Sufism and Social dynamics in Contemporary Sindh (19th century–20th century). Michel Boivin is specialized in the study of the contemporary history and historical anthropology of Muslim communities in India and Pakistan during the colonial period, and since independence was obtained. After having devoted several years to the study of the Isma’ilians of these regions, he shifted his focus to Sufi groups. He directs a research team on "History and Sufism in the Indus Valley" at the CEIAS (EHESS-CNRS). From 2008 to 2011, this team has worked on an interdisciplinary and international project centered on the Sufi site of
Sehwan Sehwan ( sd, سيوهڻ شريف, ur, ; also commonly referred to as Sehwan Sharif or ''Noble Sehwan'') is a historic city located in Jamshoro District of Sindh province in Pakistan and on the west bank of the Indus north-west of Hyderabad. The ...
Sharif. This mid-size city located in the southern Province of Pakistan called Sindh is where the tomb of the Sufi saint
Lal Shahbaz Qalandar Hazrat Sayyid Usman Marwandi, (1177 - 19 February 1274) popularly known as Lal Shahbaz Qalandar (), was a Sufi saint and poet of present-day Pakistan and Afghanistan. Lal Shahbaz Qalandar was born in Marwand, Sistan to a family from Baghdad ...
(d. 1274) is located. This sanctuary has become a site of pilgrimage where ecstatic dance practices take place. In addition, it is also an ecumenical center, as Hindus still play an important part in the rituals. Finally, Sehwan Sharif is a gathering place for
gyrovague Gyrovagues (sometimes Gyrovagi or Gyruvagi) were wandering or itinerant minister, itinerant monks without fixed residence or leadership, who relied on charity and the hospitality of others. The term, coming from French, itself from Late Latin ''gy ...
renouncers, used to be called "qalandars" and are now most often referred to as "malangs". One of his most recent research interests is in "Hindu Sufism" in Pakistan and India. To start out, Michel Boivin retraced the migratory paths of Sindhi Hindus, then researched their Sufi rituals in order to evaluate the extent to which they had to change to adapt to their new environment. In parallel, he has begun work on collecting the publications and manuscripts on Sufism in the Sindhi language. Despite his emphasis on historical anthropology, Michel Boivin continues to work on the appearance of new forms of knowledge in the 19th century. He is particularly interested in the production of a new culture in the Sindh province as a result of interaction between British colonial rule, the emergence of new elites and the objectification of Sufism. His work is therefore to be understood as a continuation of postcolonial studies, as he is engaged in reconstructing the evolution of the "Sufi culture of Sindh" based on archival work carried out in the Indian sub-continent and in Europe. During the last years, he used to employ iconography as a meaningful data to fill gaps resulting from the lack of written sources. Michel Boivin teaches Historical Anthropology of South Asia at EHESS, Paris, with a focus on the Sindhicate area. He created in 2008 the Mission Interdisciplinaire Française du Sindh (MIFS) and signed an MOU with the department of Antiquities, Government of Sindh. The same year, an electronic newsletter was launched. In 2010, the MIFS became a register NGO (Association Loi 1901) in France. In 2011, Michel Boivin started the Centre for Social Science in Karachi (CSSK), with an MOU with the Alliance Française de Karachi which was hosting the centre. The same year, he funded the CSSK Series with OUP Pakistan. The CSSK organizes academic events and in 2015, it became a register NGO (Association Loi 1901) under French law. The CSSK organizes conferences, exhibitions, as well as training in Social Sciences for students, which are followed by field trips in Sindh. Beyond supervising PhD students at EHESS, he is also an external examiner at the University of Karachi and the University of Sindh. As director of CSSK, he signed a MOU with N. E. D. University, Department of Architecture and Planning, Karachi in 2017. This MOU wished to reinforce the cooperation between the CEIAS and the N. E. D. University for the new project Michel Boivin had launched in 2016: the Uderolal Research Project (ULRP). Throughout this new ongoing project, the aim is to devote a multidisciplinary approach to the study of a sacred figure named Jhulelal, as well as with many other names, knowing it is worshipped both in Pakistan and in India, mostly by Sindhi speaking populations. In 2011, Michel Boivin was nominated as member of the National Committee of CNRS, section 38 Ethnology, Anthropology and Sociology of Religions. In 2016, he was elected member in the same committee for a tenure of five years. In 2017, Michel Boivin was elected Director of the Centre for South Asian Studies (CNRS-EHESS), with three co-directors, and his tenure was from January 1, 2019 to December 31, 2022. In 2021, he was co-founding as co-editor with
Matthew Cook Matthew Cook (born February 7, 1970) is a mathematician and computer scientist who is best known for having proved Stephen Wolfram's conjecture that the Rule 110 cellular automaton is Turing-complete. Biography Cook was born in Morgantown, West V ...
the ''Journal of Sindhi Studies'', published by
Brill Publishers Brill Academic Publishers (known as E. J. Brill, Koninklijke Brill, Brill ()) is a Dutch international academic publisher founded in 1683 in Leiden, Netherlands. With offices in Leiden, Boston, Paderborn and Singapore, Brill today publishes 27 ...
, and in 2022, ''Critical Pakistan Studies'' published by
Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press is the university press of the University of Cambridge. Granted letters patent by Henry VIII of England, King Henry VIII in 1534, it is the oldest university press A university press is an academic publishing hou ...
, with Matthew Cook, Kamran Asdar Ali and Amina Yaqin. Before his retirement, he decided to devote a fieldwork back to the Ismaili Studies. The first part was made in the Roshan Khayal
Dawoodi Bohra The Dawoodi Bohras are a religious denomination within the Ismā'īlī branch of Shia Islam. Their largest numbers reside in India, Pakistan, Yemen, East Africa, and the Middle East, with a growing presence across Europe, North America, South ...
community of
Malegaon Malegaon is a city and a municipal corporation in Nashik District in the Indian state of Maharashtra. It is situated on the bank of Mosam River. History Malegaon (previously Maligaon G.N. Wright, 1837. See entry for MULLIGAUM, p216.) at the co ...
, in
Maharashtra Maharashtra (; , abbr. MH or Maha) is a states and union territories of India, state in the western India, western peninsular region of India occupying a substantial portion of the Deccan Plateau. Maharashtra is the List of states and union te ...
, and the second one was devoted to two main sites of the
Nizari The Nizaris ( ar, النزاريون, al-Nizāriyyūn, fa, نزاریان, Nezāriyān) are the largest segment of the Ismaili Muslims, who are the second-largest branch of Shia Islam after the Twelvers. Nizari teachings emphasize independent ...
Ismaili community in
Mumbai Mumbai (, ; also known as Bombay — the official name until 1995) is the capital city of the Indian state of Maharashtra and the ''de facto'' financial centre of India. According to the United Nations, as of 2018, Mumbai is the second- ...
itself, namely the Darkhana
Jama'at Khana Jamatkhana (from fa, جماعت خانه , literally "congregational place") is an amalgamation derived from the Arabic word ''jama‘a'' (gathering) and the Persian word ''khana'' (house, place). It is a term used by some Muslim communities a ...
in
Dongri Dongri is a port city in the Mira-Bhayandar Municipal Corporation, Mira-Bhayandar municipality of Thane district, situated just north of Gorai, Mumbai. The word 'Overall, Dungaree' (worker's overalls worn in Britain) has its origin in Dongri due ...
, and Hasan Ali Shah's
dargah A dargah ( fa, درگاه ''dargâh'' or ''dargah'', Turkish: ''dergâh'', Hindustani: ''dargah'' दरगाह درگاہ, bn, দরগাহ ''dorgah'') is a shrine or tomb built over the grave of a revered religious figure, often ...
in
Mazagaon Mazagaon, also spelled Mazgaon and Mazagon (Portuguese rule Mazagão), and pronounced by the Catholics as 'Mazgon' or 'Maz-a-gon' and the Marathi-speakers as Mazhgav, is one of the seven islands of Mumbai. References ;Notes {{reflist ;Sou ...
.The latter CNRS field was also linked to a project he was starting with Karen Ruffle (University of Toronto) on Muslim devotion to the ahl-e bait. Michel Boivin retired in may 2023, and he became Emeritus Research Director at CNRS, Centre for the Study of South Asia and the Himalayas (CESAH). He is currently working with Matthew Cook on a ''Handbook of Sindhi Studies'', to be published by Routledge.


Works


Books

* * * * * * * * * * * * Michel Boivin with Rémy Delage (eds) (2016), ''Devotional Islam in South Asia. Shrines, journeys and wanderers'', New York and Oxon, Routledge. * Michel Boivin, Matthew Cook and Julien Levesque (2017), ''Discovering Sindh’s Past. Selections from the Journal of the Sind Historical Society, 1934–1948'', Edited by, Karachi, Oxford University Press. * Boivin, Michel (2019).''The Hindu Sufis of South Asia. Partition, Shrine Culture and the Sindhis of India'', London, I. B. Tauris. * * Boivin, Michel (2021). ''The Sufi Paradigm and the Makings of Vernacular Knowledge in Colonial India: The Case of Sindh (1851-1929)'', New York, Palgrave McMillan. * Forthcoming (contract signed), with Manoël Pénicaud (Eds), ''Inter-religious Practices and Saint Veneration in the Muslim World. Khidr/Khizr from the Middle East to South Asia'', Routledge, 2023. * Forthcoming (contract signed), ''Khojas, Vaniyos and Faqirs. Devotion, Religious Authority and Social Structures in Sindh'', Brill Publisher, 2023.


Chapters and papers

*2021 , "Sufism and the Hindus of Sindh", in Saaz Aggarwal (ed.), ''Sindhi Tapestry. Reflections on the Sindhi Identity: An Anthology'', Pune, Black-And-White Fountain, 2022, pp. 215-222. *2021 , "Pakistan: Introduction", in ''Brill Encyclopedia of Religions of Indigenous People in South Asia'', edited by Marine Carrin, Leiden-Boston: Brill, pp. 847–861. *2021 , "Religions among the Indigenous People of Sindh", in ''Brill Encyclopedia of Religions of Indigenous People in South Asia'', edited by Marine Carrin, Leiden-Boston, Brill, pp. 872–884. *2021 , "Kalash religion", in ''Brill Encyclopedia of Religions of Indigenous People in South Asia'', edited by Marine Carrin, Leiden-Boston, Brill, pp. 897–905. *2021 , « Histoire du chiisme ismaélien », in ''Minorités en Islam, islam en minorité'', Paris, IISMM/Diacritiques Editions, pp. 45–56. *2021 , "Religion and Society in Pakistan: From Pīr’s Domination to Individual Connected Piety", ''Routledge Handbook of South Asian Religions'', Edited By Knut A. Jacobsen,London and New York, Routledge, pp. 287–299. *2021 , "Sufism and Vernacular Knowledge in Sindh", ''Routledge Handbook of Sufism'', Edited By Lloyd Rigeon, London and New York, Routledge, pp. 461–473. *2020 , « Bodies & Artefacts. Relics and Other Devotional Supports in Shiʿ⁠a Societies in the Indic and Iranian Worlds. An Introduction », with Annabelle Collinet and Sepideh Parsapajouh, ''Journal of the Material Culture in the Muslim World'' (Brill Publisher), Vol. 1 – n°2, Guest editor with Sepideh Parsapajouh and Annabelle Collinet: "Bodies and Artefacts in the Muslim World", pp. 187–194. *2020 , "The Polyvalent Qadamgāh Imām ʿAlī in Hyderabad, Sindh: A Preliminary Study in Relics, Political Power, and Community Setup", ''Journal of the Material Culture in the Muslim World'' (Brill Publisher), Vol. 1 – n°2, Guest editor with Sepideh Parsapajouh and Annabelle Collinet: "Bodies and Artefacts in the Muslim World", pp. 243–262. *2019 « Ritual Displacements as process of constructing and deconstructing boundaries in a Sufi pilgrimage of Pakistan », in C. Bergmann and J. Schaflechner, ''Ritual Journeys in South Asia. Constellations and Contestations of Mobility and Space'', London & New York, Routledge, pp. 118–138. *2019 , « Etre fakir à Sehwan Sharif (Pakistan) », in Adeline Herrou (dir.), ''Une journée dans une vie, une vie dans une journée. Des ascètes et des moines aujourd'hui'', Paris, PUF, pp. 127–144. * «Khwaja Khiẓr et le Sindhu (Indus) : archéologie d’une figure sacrée du Sindh à identités multiples », in Sur les chemins d’Onagre. Histoire et archéologie orientales. Hommage à Monik Kervran, édité par Claire Hardy-Guilbert, Hélène Renel, Axelle Rougeulle et Eric Vallet, Oxford, Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2018, pp. 3–14. * and Bhavna Rajpal, 2018, « From Udero Lal in Sindh to Ulhasnagar in Maharashtra: Partition and Memories Across Borders in the Tradition of Jhulelal », in Churnjeet Mahn · Anne Murphy Editors, Partition and the Practice of Memory, Palgrave MacMillan, pp. 43–62. * "Authority, Shrines and Spaces: Scrutinizing Devotional Islam from South Asia", in Michel Boivin and Rémy Delage (eds.), Devotional Islam in Contemporary South Asia: Shrines, Journeys and Wanderers, New Delhi, Routledge, 2016, pp. 1–11. * "The New Elite and the Issue of Sufism: A Journey from Vedanta to Theosophy in Colonial Sindh», in Dr Muhammad Ali Shaikh (compiled by), Sindh Through the century II. Proceedings of the Second International Seminar Held in Karachi in March 2014 by Sindh Madressatul Islam University, Karachi, Karachi, SMI University Press, 2015, pp. 215–231. * "The Saint as Ancestor in some Sufi and Ismaili Communities of the Sindhi Area", in C. Mayeur-Jaouen & A. Papas (eds.), Family Portraits with Saints. Hagiography, Sanctity, and Family in the Muslim World, Berlin, Klaus Schwarz Verlag, 2014, pp. 327–341. * "Les Khojah et la construction de la communauté ismaélienne dans la période contemporaine : Invention de la tradition et communauté imaginée", dans Nicole Khouri et Joanna Pereira Leite (dir.), Khojas Ismaïli. Du Mozambique à la.globalisation, Paris, L'Harmattan, 2014, pp. 317–337. * "The Isma'ili – Isna 'Ashari Divide Among the Khojas: Exploring Forgotten Judicial Data from Karachi", Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Volume 24 / Issue 03 / July 2014, pp. 381 – 396. * "Music and Remembrance as Meditation: Samâ' in the Indus Valley", in Halvor Eifring (ed.), Meditation in Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Cultural Histories, London, Bloomsbury, 2013, pp. 214–224. * "Murshid Mulan Shâh (1883–1962): A Sufi Itinerary from Sehwan Sharif in Pakistan to Haridwar in India", Oriente Moderno, XCII, 2012, 2, p. 291–312. * "Compétition religieuse et culture partagée dans les lieux saints complexes d'Asie du sud", in Isabelle Depret et Guillaume Dye (dir.), Partage du sacré : transferts, cultes mixtes, rivalités interconfessionnelles, Bruxelles, Editions EME, 2012, pp. 149–165. * "L'islam, l’Etat et les ulémas dans la république islamique du Pakistan. Un bras de fer de plus d’un demi-siècle", in Christophe Jaffrelot et Aminah Mohammad-Arif, Politique et religions en Asie du sud. Le sécularisme dans tous ses états ? Paris, Editions de l’EHESS, 2012, pp. 69–92. * "The Sufi Centre of Jhok Sharif in Pakistan (Sindh): Questioning the ziyarat as a social process", in C. Bennett & Ch. Ramsey (ed.), South Asian Sufis: Devotion, Deviation and Destiny, Delhi, Continuum Books, 2012, pp. 95–109. * "Devotional Literature and Sufism in the light of Nabi Bakhsh Baloch’s contribution", ''Journal of the Pakistan Historical Society'', Vol. IX, n°4, 2011, pp. 13–22. * "Karachi: rivalités ethniques, affrontements sectaires et compétitions politiques", in Béatrice Giblin (dir.), Les conflits dans le monde. Approche géopolitique, Armand Colin, collection U, 2011, pp. 59–67. * "Le qalandar et le shâh: les savoirs fakirs et leur impact sur la société du Sud Pakistan", ''Archives des Sciences Sociales des Religions'', n°154, 2011, pp. 101–120.


Sources


Michel Boivin
profile at
EHESS The School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (french: École des hautes études en sciences sociales; EHESS) is a graduate ''grande école'' and ''grand établissement'' in Paris focused on academic research in the social sciences. The ...

Michel Boivin
profile at the Institute for Ismaili Studies * {{DEFAULTSORT:Boivin, Michel Living people 21st-century French historians French Sindhologists Historians of Pakistan French expatriates in Pakistan Year of birth missing (living people)