
New Books in Islamic Studies James McDougall, "Worlds of Islam: A Global History" (Basic Books, 2026)
Mar 27, 2026
James McDougall, Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at Oxford and author of Worlds of Islam, offers a sweeping global narrative from seventh-century Arabia to the digital age. He traces Islam’s spread via armies, merchants, and missionaries. The conversation highlights diverse local stories, surprising figures, periodization choices, and the book’s role in addressing modern Islamophobia.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Bridging Stereotypes And Specialist Scholarship
- Teaching broad Islamic history requires bridging widespread stereotypes and specialist scholarship.
- James McDougall built a single synthetic narrative to connect diverse disciplinary research from epigraphy to modern anthropology.
From Granular Case Studies To A Global Narrative
- Local, granular studies reveal how Islam is embodied in particular communities across regions.
- McDougall synthesized ethnographic and regional scholarship (e.g., West Africa, Afghanistan) into a global narrative spanning 620s to 2020s.
Periodize To Reveal Continuity Not Decline
- Periodize to emphasize continuities rather than rise-and-fall civilizational narratives.
- McDougall divides the book 600–1200, 1200–1800, then 1800–1950 and 1950–2020 to show expansion, diversification, and shifting centers of gravity.


