Suburban Islam
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:15th Mar '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£27.49(9780197558539)
For many American Muslims, the 9/11 attacks and subsequent War on Terror marked a rise in intense scrutiny of their religious lives and political loyalties. In Suburban Islam, Justine Howe explores the rise of "third spaces," social surroundings that are neither home nor work, created by educated, middle-class American Muslims in the wake of increased marginalization. Third spaces provide them the context to challenge their exclusion from the American mainstream and to enact visions for American Islam different from those they encounter in their local mosques. One such third space is the Mohammed Alexander Russell Webb Foundation, a family-oriented Muslim institution in Chicago's suburbs. Howe uses Webb as a window into how Muslim American identity is formed through the interplay of communal interpretive practices, institutional rituals, and everyday life. The diverse Muslim families of the Webb Foundation have transformed hallmark secular suburbanite activities like going to the mall, going out on weeknights, or taking summer vacations, into acts of piety--rituals they describe as the enactment of "proper" American Muslim identity. Howe analyzes the relationship between these consumerist practices and the Webb Foundation's adult educational programs, through which participants critique what they call "cultural Islam." They envision creating an "indigenous" American Islam characterized by gender equality, reason, and pluralism. Through changing configurations of ethnicity, gender, and socioeconomic class, Webb participants imagine a "seamless identity" that marries their Muslim faith to an idealized vision of suburban middle-class America. Suburban Islam captures the fragile optimism of educated, cosmopolitan American Muslims during the Obama presidency, as they imagined a post-racial, pluralistic, and culturally resonant American Islam. Even as this vision aims to be more inclusive, it also reflects enduring inequalities of race, class, and gender.
[a] masterfully written ethnographic study ... Howe paints an artful portrait of one community coping in ordinary ways with an extraordinary assault on their cultural citizenship. Howe's book will appeal to both scholars and advanced students in the humanistic and social scientific study of Islam and other American religions. She writes as an embodied ethnographer ... Howe offers a compelling discussion of how contemporary non-Muslim and Muslim academics' production of knowledge -- including her own -- becomes a resource for intra-Muslim identity work ... Howe's book provokes us to resist reifying the shifting ground of religious lives in multiple and unexpected spaces. * Lance D. Laird, Journal of Religion *
From spatial analysis and lived religion, to consumer culture and immigration studies, Suburban Islam makes more interventions than its brief title suggests. It is a delight to read, and students and scholars of Islam in America, religion and space, and religion and consumer culture will find Howe's work particularly useful. * Michael McLaughlin, Reading Religion *
Howe's work is important in the scholarship of Muslim Americans, giving us a view into what Islam looks like for young professionals in suburban America. Her discussion of the community's attempt at separating culture and religion is a theme that exists beyond the Muslim American community ... Howe provides a key component in better understanding Muslims in America by contributing a thorough case study of suburban Islam. * Iman Ahmad-Sediqe, Review of Religious Research *
ISBN: 9780190258870
Dimensions: 160mm x 236mm x 33mm
Weight: 617g
320 pages