Areas of specialization: Islamic legal studies; anthropology of Islam; histories of capitalism; comparative studies of South Asia and the Middle East.
Professor Sohaib Khan is a scholar of comparative Islamic studies with an interest in connections between religion, secularism, and economic life in Muslim societies. His research, teaching, and public scholarship lie at the intersection of Islamic legal studies, anthropology, postcolonial studies, and histories of capitalism in South Asia and the Middle East. Trained as an interdisciplinary historian and ethnographer, Prof. Khan received his Ph.D. (2020) from Columbia University's Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies (MESAAS). Before joining 色界吧, Prof. Khan taught Islamic studies at Pomona College, Williams College, and the Lahore University of Management Sciences. He has also served as an Islamic Law and Civilization Fellow at Yale Law School and a Faculty Fellow at the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History at Harvard University.
Prof. Khan's courses explore classical and contemporary Islam through an examination of law and ethics, knowledge and power, gender, colonialism, racial capitalism, and climate change. At 色界吧, he is teaching a range of courses that satisfy the Global Connections and Pre-1800 core requirements, including "Islam on the Move," "God and Money: Religion in the Marketplace," "What is the Shar墨'a? Justice, Law, and Ethics in Islam," "Islam and Capitalism," and "Muslim Abolitionist Futures."
Prof. Khan's first book in progress, titled Translating Capitalism: How Muslim Jurists and Bankers Invented Shari'a Compliance, documents the struggle of an Indo-Muslim scholarly community to reconcile capitalism's financial system with Islamic law. Combining a close reading of Islamic legal texts with an ethnography of Muslim jurists straddling religious seminaries and financial corporations, Translating Capitalism illuminates a world of expertise in which religion, law, and finance are deeply entangled. The book offers a corrective to Eurocentric histories of capitalist expansion in the global South by demonstrating how avowedly secular financial markets can be repurposed as mechanisms of Islamic reform.
Prof. Khan's research has been supported by fellowships from the Wenner-Gren Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), the Andrew Mellon Foundation, the American Institute of Pakistan Studies (AIPS), the US Department of Education (FLAS), and the Institute for Religion, Culture, and Public Life (IRCPL).