Islam and Society -

Islam and Society

Thijl Sunier (Herausgeber)

Media-Kombination
1508 Seiten
2017
Routledge
978-1-138-91678-4 (ISBN)
1.519,95 inkl. MwSt
This new 4 volume collection will bring together the key literature on Islam and Society. In four broad themes the collection will cover Islam and power; minorities and pluralism; everyday life, ethics and community building; subjectivation, discipline and piety. Fully indexed and including a newly written introduction by the editor, this is an essential reference resource for student and scholar.

Thijl Sunier is Full Professor in the Anthropology of Religion and holds the Islam in European Societies chair at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.

Islam and Society: Critical Concepts in Sociology

Edited by Thijl Sunier

Volume 1: The Perils of Modernity: Islam and Social Transformation

Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Part 1: The language of modernity






L. Ahmed, ‘Western Ethnocentrism and Perceptions of the Harem’, Feminist Studies 8, 3, 1982, 521-534.



D. Eickelman, ‘Islam and the Language of Modernity’, Deadalus 29, 1, 2000, 119-135.



R. W. Hefner, ‘Multiple Modernities: Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism in a Globalizing Age’, Annual Review of Anthropology 27, 1998, 83-104.



E. W. Said, ‘Representing the Colonized: Anthropology's Interlocutors’, Critical Inquiry 15, 2, 1989, 205-225.



Salvatore, ‘Power and Authority within European Secularity: From the Enlightenment Critique of Religion to the Contemporary Presence of Islam’, The Muslim World 96, 4, 2006, 543-561.



H. Zaidi, ‘Muslim Reconstructions of Knowledge and the Re-enchantment of Modernity’, Theory, Culture & Society 23, 5, 2006, 69-91.
Part 2 Society and politics




J. W. Anderson, ‘Conjuring with Ibn Khaldun: From an Anthropological Point of View’, Journal of Asian and African Studies 18, 3-4, 1983, 263-273.



L. Binder, ‘Exceptionalism and Authenticity: The Question of Islam and Democracy’, The Arab Studies Journal 6, 1, 1989, 33-59.



J. A. Massad, ‘The Choice of Liberalism’, in Islam in Liberalism (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015), pp. 1-14.
Part 3: Progress and development




S. A. Arjomand, ‘Islam, Political Change and Globalization’, Thesis Eleven 76, 1, 2004, 9-28.



Bayat, ‘The Work Ethic in Islam: A Comparison with Protestantism’, The Islamic Quarterly 36, 1, 1992, 5-27.


Part 4: Secularism




T. Asad, ‘Secularism, Nation-State, Religion’ in Formations of the Secular (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2003), pp. 181-205.



S. Bangstad, ‘Contesting Secularism/s: Secularism and Islam in the work of Talal Asad’, Anthropological Theory 9, 2, 2009, 188-208.



F. Keyman, ‘Islam, Modernity and Secularism: The Case of Turkey’, Theory, Culture & Society 24, 2, 2007, 215-234.



M. K. Masud, ‘The Construction and Deconstruction of Secularism as an Ideology in Contemporary Muslim Thought’, Asian Journal of Social Science 33, 3, 2005, 363-383.



S. Zubaida, ‘Islam and Secularization’, Asian Journal of Social Science 33, 3, 2005, 438-448.


Volume 2: Space, Place, Time: The Spatial Dimensions of Islam

Contents

Acknowledgements

Part 5: Mobilities




S. Bhardwaj, ‘Non-Hajj Pilgrimage in Islam: A Neglected Dimension of Religious Circulation’, Journal of Cultural Geography 17, 2, 1998, 69-87.



M. Buitelaar, ‘Moved by Mecca: The Meanings of the Hajj for Present Day Dutch Muslims’, in I. Flaskerud and R. Natvig (eds), Muslim Pilgrimage in and from Europe (Abingdon: Routledge, 2017).



H. Donnan, ‘Pilgrimage and Islam in Rural Pakistan: The Influence of the Hajj’, Etnofoor 8, 1, 1995, 63-82.



S. McLoughlin, ‘Holy Places, Contested Spaces: British-Pakistani Accounts of Pilgrimage to Makkah and Madinah’ in P. Hopkins and R. Gale (eds), Muslims in Britain: Race, Place and Identities (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2009), pp. 132-149.
Part 6: Homelands




Ahmad, ‘Genealogy of the Islamic State: Reflections on Maududi's Political Thought and Islamism’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 15, 1, 2009, 145-162.



M. Al-Rasheed, C. Kersten and M. Shterin, ‘The Caliphate: Nostalgic Memory and Contemporary Visions’ in M. Al-Rasheed, C. Kersten and M. Shterin (eds),[B] Demystifying the Caliphate: Historical Memory and Contemporary Contexts (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), pp.1-31



M. Parvin and M. Sommer, ‘Dar al-Islam: The Evolution of Muslim Territoriality and its Implications for Conflict Resolution in the Middle East’, International Journal of Middle East Studies 11, 1, 1-21.



O. Vovina, ‘Islam and the Creation of Sacred Space: The Mishar Tatars in Chuvashia’, Religion, State and Society 34, 3, 2006, 255-269.



S. Zubaida, ‘Islam and Nationalism: Continuities and Contradictions’, Nations Nationalism 10, 4, 2004, 407-420.
Part 7: Place-making




M. Maussen, ‘Islamic Presence and Mosque Establishment in France: Colonialism, Arrangements for Guest Workers and Citizenship’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 33, 6, 2007, 981-1102.



M. A. Morgahi, ‘An Emerging European Islam: The Case of the Minhajul Quran in the Netherlands’, in M. van Bruinessen and S. Allievi (eds), Producing Islamic Knowledge: Transmission and Dissemination in Western Europe (New York: Routledge, 2011), pp. 47-65.



P. Tamimi Arab, ‘"A Minaret of Light": Transducing the Islamic Call to Prayer?’, Material Religion 11, 2, 2015, 136-163.



O. Verkaaik, ‘Designing the "Anti-mosque": Identity, Religion and Affect in Contemporary European Mosque Design’, Social Anthropology 20, 2, 2012, 161-176.

Part 8: Boundaries






J. R. Bowen, ‘Does French Islam have Borders? Dilemmas of Domestication in a Global Religious Field’, American Anthropologist 106, 1, 2004, 43-55.



Y. N. Soysal, ‘Changing Parameters of Citizenship and Claims-making: Organized Islam in European Public Spheres’, Theory and Society 26, 1997, 509-527.



R. Zolberg and L. L. Woon, ‘Why Islam is Like Spanish: Cultural Incorporation in Europe and the United States’, Politics & Society 27, 1, 1999, 5-38.


Volume 3: Communities, Fractions, Networks, Audiences

Contents

Acknowledgements

Part 9: Discussion




T. Keskin, ‘The Sociology of Islam’, in H. Keskin (ed.), The Sociology of Islam: Secularism, Economy and Politics (Reading: Ithaca Press, 2011), pp. 1-21.



Y. Sadowski, ‘Political Islam: Asking the Wrong Questions?’, Annual Review of Political Science 9, 2006, 215-240.



J. Tan, ‘Culture or Class? Why Islam is Neither the Question nor the Answer’, Sociology of Islam 1, 1-2, 2013, 64-87.
Part 10: Communities, Sects, and Politics




K. P. Ewing, ‘Living Islam in the Diaspora: Between Turkey and Germany’, The South Atlantic Quarterly 102, 2-3, 2003, 405-431.



N. Hashemi, ‘Toward a Political Theory of Sectarianism in the Middle East: The Salience of Authoritarianism over Theology’, Journal of Islamic and Muslim Studies 1, 1, 2016, 65-76.



Z. Pall and M. de Koning, ‘Being and Belonging in Transnational Salafism: Informality, Social Capital and Authority in European and Middle Eastern Salafi Networks’, Journal of Muslims in Europe 6, 1, 2017.



R. Rinaldo, ‘Pious and Critical: Muslim Women Activists and the Question of Agency’, Gender & Society 28, 6, 2014, 824-846.
Part 11: Authority, Audiences and Publics




H. Kalmbach, ‘Social and Religious Change in Damascus: One Case of Female Islamic Religious Authority’, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 35, 1, 2008, 37-57.



P. Mandaville, ‘Globalization and the Politics of Religious Knowledge: Pluralizing Authority in the Muslim World’, Theory, Culture, & Society 24, 2, 2007, 101-115.



D. Schulz, ‘Promises of (Im)mediate Salvation: Islam, Broadcast Media, and the Remaking of Religious Experience in Mali’, American Ethnologist 33, 2, 2006, 210-229.



T. Sunier and M. Sahin, ‘The Weeping Sermon: Persuasion, Binding and Authority within the Gülen Movement’, Culture and Religion 16, 2, 2015, 228-241.



F. Volpi and B. Turner, ‘Making Islamic Authority Matter’, Theory, Culture and Society 24, 2, 2007, 1-19.
Part 12: A Transnational Muslim Public Sphere?




J. R. Bowen, ‘Beyond Migration: Islam as a Transnational Public Space’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30, 5, 2004, 879-894.



D. F. Eickelman and A. Salvatore, ‘The Public Sphere and Muslim Identities’, European Journal of Sociology 43, 1, 2002, 92-115.



Kort, ‘Dar al-Cyber Islam: Women, Domestic Violence, and the Islamic Reformation on the World Wide Web’, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 25, 3, 2005, 363-383.



R. Salih, ‘The Backward and the New: National, Transnational and Post‐National Islam in Europe’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30, 5, 2006, 995-1011.
Volume 4: Ethical Formation, World-making and the Self

Contents

Acknowledgements



Part 13: The Debate




T. Asad, ‘Anthropological Conceptions of Religion: Reflections on Geertz’, Man, New Series 18, 2, 1983, 237-259.



C. Geertz, ‘Religion as Cultural System’, in The Interpretation of Cultures (New York: Basic Books, 1973), pp. 87-126.



S. Schielke, ‘Second Thoughts about the Anthropology of Islam, or How to Make Sense of Grand Schemes in Everyday Life’, ZMO Working Paper, No.2, 2010, 2-16.
Part 14: Technologies of the Self




P. Eisenlohr, ‘Technologies of the Spirit: Devotional Islam, Sound Reproduction and the Dialectics of Mediation and Immediacy in Mauritius’, Anthropological Theory 9, 3, 2009, 273-296.



H. El-Sayed, A. Greenhill and C. Westrup, ‘’"I Download My Prayer Schedule": Exploring the Technological Mediation of Islamic Religious Practice at Work’, Culture and Religion 21, 6, 2015, 35-50.



C. Hirschkind, ‘The Ethics of Listening: Cassette-sermon Audition in Contemporary Egypt’, American Ethnologist 28, 3, 2001, 623-649.



S. Mahmood, ‘Rehearsed Spontaneity and the Conventionality of Ritual: Disciplines of Salat’, American Ethnologist 28, 4, 2001, 827-853.






Moors, ‘"Islamic Fashion" in Europe: Religious Conviction, Aesthetic Style, and Creative Consumption’, Encounters 1, 1, 2009, 175-201.

Part 15: Performance and Public Ethics






F. Devji, ‘The Terrorist as Humanitarian’, Social Analysis 53, 1, 2009, 173-192.



J. B. Hoesterey, ‘Prophetic Cosmopolitanism: Islam, Pop Psychology, and Civic Virtue in Indonesia’, City & Society 24, 1, 2012, 38-61.



M. LeVine, ‘Heavy Metal Muslims: The Rise of a Post-Islamist Public Sphere’, Contemporary Islam 2, 3, 2008, 229-249.



L. Moosavi, ‘British Muslim Converts Performing "Authentic Muslimness"’ Performing Islam 1, 2012, 103-128.



M. Rytter, ‘Transnational Sufism from Below: Charismatic Counselling and the Quest for Well-being’, South Asian Diaspora 6, 1, 2014, 105-119.



A. B. Sajoo, ‘The Ethics of the Public Square: A Preliminary Muslim Critique’, Institute of Ismaili Studies 2007, 2-16.



D. E. Schulz, ‘(Re) Turning to Proper Muslim Practice: Islamic Moral Renewal and Women's Conflicting Assertions of Sunni Identity in Urban Mali’, Africa Today 54, 4, 2008, 20-43.



P. A. Silverstein, ‘Sporting Faith: Islam, Soccer, and the French Nation-State’, Social Text 18, 4, 2000, 25-53.

Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 29.11.2017
Reihe/Serie Critical Concepts in Sociology
Zusatzinfo 4 Tables, black and white; 22 Halftones, black and white
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Gewicht 2930 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Allgemeine Soziologie
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Spezielle Soziologien
ISBN-10 1-138-91678-1 / 1138916781
ISBN-13 978-1-138-91678-4 / 9781138916784
Zustand Neuware
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