
New Books Network James McDougall, "Worlds of Islam: A Global History" (Basic Books, 2026)
Mar 27, 2026
James McDougall, Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at Oxford, offers a sweeping global history of Islam from Late Antiquity to the digital age. He traces long arcs of expansion, local diversity, and modern transformations. The conversation highlights biographical storytelling, research methods, and how global scholarship reshapes understanding of Islam’s past and present.
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Bridging Stereotypes And Specialist Scholarship
- Long survey courses reveal a gap between media stereotypes and specialist scholarship about Islam.
- James McDougall designed the book to bridge that gap by synthesizing dispersed disciplinary research for curious readers.
Combine Local Texture With Global Narrative
- Deep, local ethnographic work shows how Islam is lived in specific places and communities.
- McDougall aims to preserve that granular texture while assembling a single global narrative spanning 620s to the 2020s.
Use Emblematic Figures To Tell Big Trends
- Selecting protagonists is a way to narrate major trends without overloading the reader.
- McDougall uses emblematic figures like Ibn Hanbal or Abdul Malik to illustrate law, statecraft, and other wider developments.


