Salafism Goes Global
From the Gulf to the French Banlieues
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:20th Mar '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Salafism is a fundamentalist Sunni vision of Islam that is growing in popularity in many countries. In this book, Mohamed-Ali Adraoui focuses on quietist Salafism, which he calls a study in contradictions. Strongly opposed to political action, terrorism, and the overthrow of established regimes, quietist Salafism insists on restructuring Islamic norms with the fervor of a revivalist and fundamentalist ethic. Quietist Salafis seek the purification of culture and religious renewal through a "de-militantization" of the Islamic corpus. Adraoui explores the Salafis' individual trajectories, their relationship with politics, and their vision of the world and of modernity, in order to understand how quietist Salafis negotiate their social identities and religious obligations in the Western context. What does the increasing presence of Islamic movements in the global space mean? Adraoui draws parallels between the French case and that of Muslim countries, and argues that the spread of quietist Salafism is partially a result of the foreign policy of Saudi Arabia. Quietist Salafism, he argues, is resonant of Saudi Arabia's efforts to promote a legitimist, anti-anarchist, and counter-revolutionary conception of Islam, after having long legitimized and reinforced the Islamist forces and Jihadist movements when it was in its geopolitical interests to do so. Salafism Goes Global sheds light on a dynamic of globalization that is taking place in the margins.
Adraoui's ethnographic interviews are light and revealing. For any worker seeking insights into the attraction of this lifestyle in Europe and specifically France, this is an essential read. * David Cashin, Columbia International University, Evangelical Missions Quarterly *
ISBN: 9780190062460
Dimensions: 157mm x 236mm x 25mm
Weight: 476g
248 pages