A Book of Conquest : The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia Where the Wild Frontiers Are: Pakistan and the American Imagination
The Loss of Hindustan: The Invention of India
Manan Ahmed Asif, also known as Manan Ahmed, is a Pakistani historian of South Asia and West Asia. He is an associate professor of history at Columbia University in New York City.[1]
Ahmed was born in 1971 in Lahore, Pakistan. At a young age, his family moved to Doha, Qatar, where his father worked as a migrant laborer. In the 8th grade, Ahmed and his family moved back to Lahore. Having grown up abroad, Ahmed initially struggled to reintegrate back into Pakistani culture, as his Arabic was more proficient than his Urdu.[5]
Ahmed's work often combines archaeological, numismatic, epigraphic, and literary evidence and focuses on the history of South Asia.[14]
According to Ahmed, Muslim presence in the subcontinent is not to be understood as a history of conquests or Manichean conflict (religious, military, etc.). Ahmed argues instead, that we recognize that presence as “lived spaces” (A Book 49), interconnected with each other across the region, and full of particularities that must be understood in their own terms.[15]
^Ahmed, Manan (December 2008). The Many Histories of Muhammad b. Qasim: Narrating the Muslim Conquest of Sindh (PhD in South Asian Languages and Civilizations thesis). The University of Chicago. ProQuest304406685.
^Zutshi, Chitralekha (2017-12-11). "Manan Ahmed Asif. A Book of Conquest: The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia". The American Historical Review. Vol. 122, no. 5. pp. 1583–1584. doi:10.1093/ahr/122.5.1583.