This paper examines the making and circulation of tāʿziyas in the small towns of Masauli, Biswan, and Mahmudabad in North India to explore how mourning for Imam Husayn becomes embedded in practices of craft, labor, and devotion. While scholarship on Muharram has largely focused on major urban centers such as Lucknow or Hyderabad, this study shifts attention to qasbati contexts where tāʿziyadari is sustained through localized networks of artisans, patrons, and devotees. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, interviews, and participant observation during Muharram processions, the paper argues that the tāʿziya functions not merely as a symbolic representation of Husayn’s shrine in Karbala but as an intercessory object through which devotees seek closeness to God (Allah).
Attached Paper
Online June Annual Meeting 2026
Sunni Hands, Husayn’s Memory: Crafting Intercession in Qaṣbāti (Small-towns) Uttar Pradesh
Papers Session: Muslim Technologies of Work, Class, and Everyday Life in India
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
