
“An excellent ethnography of a neglected Muslim community. Furthermore, Blank successfully demonstrates how modernity is a highly complex historical process of flexible ends constructed through multiple means rather than a rigid structure that the West happens to fit into more comfortably than the rest of the world.” Walter Armbrust, Oxford University, in American Ethnologist
“In the end, one can only congratulate Blank for successfully filling an important gap in the field of Ismaili studies in such a masterly way and recommend the book to scholars and students in the fields of Islamic and South Asian studies.” Samer Traboulsi, Princeton University, in Journal of the American Oriental Society
"Students of religion, particularly those of the Islamic tradition, are indebted to Blank for the skillful manner in which he has opened windows on this heretofore little-understood community." Ali S. Asani, Harvard University, in History of Religion
“This is a provocative and stimulating work and can satisfy a wide range of readers, from scholars in field to non-academics who will read the book out of curiosity. Blank’s lucid writing is specially rewarding.” Mazyar Lotfalian, New York University, in International Journal of Middle East Studies
“White-robed, bearded Muslim men tracking financial portfolios on their laptops: Bombay's Bohra community has combined fidelity to their religious commandments with a hearty embrace of secular learning and technology....Blank's book should be read for his portrait of a group trying to carve out a place for their practices while maintaining peaceful relations with religious activists and secularists alike, a delicate tight-rope act that he chronicles well." John R. Bowen, Washington University of St. Louis, in The Washington Post
“As anthropologist Jonah Blank tells us in his worthwhile and intriguing study, [the Bohras] adhere to strict Islamic practices 'as faithfully as any pietist could wish...[yet] exhibit greater gender equality than most communities of the [Indian] subcontinent, and have become Internet pioneers united members of their far-flung denomination into a worldwide cyber-congregation.'” The Chicago Tribune
“Il est le premier Occidental à avoir pu approcher d’aussi près le chef suprême, da’i, des Bohras et sa garde rapprochée. Il a été autorisé à participer à des fêtes organisées par la noblesse.” Michel Boivin, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in L’Homme
“Jonah Blank has produced a scrupulously researched and impressively detailed account of the Daudi Bohras, a fascinating and relatively unknown religious community. In doing so, Blank does much more than simply reveal the lives of his subjects. He also undermines the inaccurate (and often unkind) stereotypes of Islam...His research is methodologically sound, employing direct observation, multiple interviews, case studies, and survey research (both his own and that of other scholars). He is modest in his claims and backs up what he does assert with empirical evidence. In short, Blank maintains an air of detachment appropriate for a scholar as well as a top-notch journalist.” Magill's Literary Annual
“A welcome addition...Jonah Blank has done a service to future scholars.” H-Net Reviews
“An insightful sociological study [full of] myth-shattering facts,...Mullahs on the Mainframe is likely to remain a major reference work on this important mechantile community for a long time to come. Through painstaking research, Jonah Blank has produced an exhaustive study which shows how Islam could be put to work without contradiction with modernity in modern nation-states.” Islamic World