EXAMINING ISLAMIC IDEOLOGICAL NARRATIVES IN MIDDLE AND SECONDARY ENGLISH TEXTBOOKS IN SINDH, PAKISTAN: A CDA APPROACH

Authors

  • Shoukat Ali Lohar Assistant Professor in English at centre of English Language and Linguistics (CELL) At Mehran University of Engineering and Technology Jamshoro, Pakistan. Author
  • Dr. Saima Murtaza Pandhiani Assistant Professor, Institute of English Language and Literature, University of Sindh, Jamshoro.Pakistan Author
  • Shah Nawaz Barich PhD Scholar at Institute of English Language & Literature , University of Sindh Jamshoro. Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63878/jalt1900

Keywords:

Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA), constructing an “us” identity, Islam/Islamic ideology, Muslim identity, Pakistan, power relations, religion-based narratives, Sindh.

Abstract

This study critically examines Islamic discourse in the English textbooks prescribed for middle and secondary school students in Sindh, Pakistan. It explores how these textbooks shape learners’ religious and national identities by encouraging pan-Islamic connections. The research highlights recurring themes drawn from textbook excerpts that are used by key actors in Sindh’s education system to promote a sense of Pakistani patriotism grounded in religion, rooted in the historical legacy of Pan-Islamism. Using a qualitative design, the study applies thematic analysis to selected content from the English textbooks. Its analytical framework is informed by Foucault’s discourse theory, particularly his ideas of the technologies of power and the self in producing subjects. The theoretical perspective also incorporates debates surrounding pan-Islamic thought. The findings suggest that within school education, textbooks function as influential tools that present Islam as an all-encompassing metaphor for Pakistan’s national identity. The study situates these textbooks within schools as sites of discursive social practices. It argues that by presenting discourse as legitimate knowledge, the textbooks lead students to construct an imagined “us” from a religious standpoint—both as Pakistanis in particular and as part of a broader Muslim brotherhood in general.

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Published

2026-03-03