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1. Introduction: Studying Islam in German East Africa
1.1 Previous Scholarship and Sources
1.2 Historical Overview and Chapter Plan
I. Race and Religion: Islam and the 'Arab Revolt'
2. Supplanting Arabdom: Race and Religion in the German Conquest
2.1 Islam and Arabdom in the Scramble for East Africa
2.2 The Arab Revolt in Imperial Reckoning
2.3 Insurgent Coalitions and Arab Identity
2.4 Islam and Arab Politics
3. Contested Philology: Kiswahili as Religious Language
3.1 Missionary Philology, Religion, and Romanisation
3.2 Kiswahili as Contested Language
3.3 The Christianisation of Kiswahil
3.4 Race and Language: Colonial Religion and the Disavowal of Hybridity
II. Colonial Instrumentality: Islam in the German Civilising Mission
4. Slavery and Religion: From Anti-Islamic Abolitionism to Christian Serfdom
4.1 The Quick Rise and Fall of the German Anti-Slavery Movement
4.2 Islam and Christianity in the Civilising Regime
4.3 Slavery in Missionary Campaigns and Parliamentary Debates
4.4 Bureaucratised Manumission and Coercive Labour Regimes
5. Educating for Islam? The German Government Schools and Christian Civilising
5.1 A School for Muslims in Tanga
.2 Secular Schools and Missionary Complaints
5.3 Repression and Simple Equivalences
5.4 Colonial Instrumentality: Islam, Made in the Image of Civilising
III. Coloured Justice: Colonial Jurisdiction and Islamic Law
6. Islam in the German Legal Order: Constitutional Conflicts and Native Law
6.1 The Schutzgebietsgesetz of 1886
.2 Implementing a Racial Divide
6.3 Defining Religious Exemptions
6.4 Islam in the Colonial Practice of Native Law
7. Studying Islamic Law: Elisions of German Scholarship
7.1 German Orientalism and Islamic Jurisprudence
7.2 Native Law and Islamic Influence
7.3 Coloured Justice: The Irreality of Colonial Law
IV. Political Islam: The Making of Islamic Danger
8. Phantoms of Muslim Sedition: From Maji Maji to the Mecca Letters
8.1 Islam in the Maji Maji War
8.2 The Mecca Letter of 1908
8.3 The Liabilities of Islamic Danger
8.4 Sufi Piety and Government Interventions
9. Mainstreaming Islamic Danger: Scholars, Missionaries, and Colonial Surveillance
9.1 German Scholars and the Geopolitics of Islam
9.2 Beckers Islamwissenschaft and the Colonial Congress of 1910
9.3 Colonial Press and Missionary Activism
9.4 Surveying Islam in East Africa
9.5 Political Islam: The Swan Song of Wartime Propaganda
10. Conclusion: A Genealogy of Colonial Religion
10.1 Pluralising Concepts: A Genealogy of Entangled Pretensions
10.2 Provincialising Europe: The Force of the Unrepresented
10.3 Rhizomatic Topography: The Sprawling Study of Islam.

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