This book explores the richness of Pakistan's religious landscape,
giving attention to a number of topics: Shia flagellation processions,
Urdu-language pulp fiction, streetside rituals involving animals
(pariah-kites and fortune-telling parrots), and the use of sorcery to
contend with the jinns that are believed to infest cities such as
Lahore. Uniting these topics is an investigation of how Islamist
politicians seek to eradicate sectarian diversity and repress localized
forms of Muslim folk practices in the name of a standardized, uniform,
and globalized version of Islam. The book looks at forms of resistance
to this Islamist globalization, such as collaborative efforts by
Christian, Hindu, and Muslim human-rights activists to repeal Pakistan's
notorious blasphemy law and assert the worth of religious pluralism.