Geographies of Muslim Identities: Diaspora, Gender and Belonging

In recent years, geographies of identities, including those of ethnicity, religion, 'race' and gender, have formed an increasing focus of contemporary human geography. The events of September 11th, 2001 particularly illustrated the ways in which identities can be transformed across time and space by both global and local events of a social, cultural, political and economic nature. Such transformations have also demonstrated the temporal and spatial construction of hate and fear, and of increasing incidences of 'Islamophobia' through the construction of Muslims as 'the Other'. As the social scientific study of religion continues to be marginalized within mainstream scholarship, there remains an important gap in the literature.

This timely book addresses this gap by collecting a range of cutting-edge contributions from the social, cultural, political, historical and economic sub-disciplines of geography, together with writings from gender studies, cultural studies and leisure studies where research has revealed a strong spatial dimension to the construction, representation, contestation and reworking of Muslim identities. The contributors illustrate the ways in which such identities are constructed, represented, negotiated and contested in everyday life in a wide variety of international contexts, focusing upon issues connected with diaspora, gender and belonging.


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Geographies of Muslim Identities: Diaspora, Gender and Belonging

In recent years, geographies of identities, including those of ethnicity, religion, 'race' and gender, have formed an increasing focus of contemporary human geography. The events of September 11th, 2001 particularly illustrated the ways in which identities can be transformed across time and space by both global and local events of a social, cultural, political and economic nature. Such transformations have also demonstrated the temporal and spatial construction of hate and fear, and of increasing incidences of 'Islamophobia' through the construction of Muslims as 'the Other'. As the social scientific study of religion continues to be marginalized within mainstream scholarship, there remains an important gap in the literature.

This timely book addresses this gap by collecting a range of cutting-edge contributions from the social, cultural, political, historical and economic sub-disciplines of geography, together with writings from gender studies, cultural studies and leisure studies where research has revealed a strong spatial dimension to the construction, representation, contestation and reworking of Muslim identities. The contributors illustrate the ways in which such identities are constructed, represented, negotiated and contested in everyday life in a wide variety of international contexts, focusing upon issues connected with diaspora, gender and belonging.


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Geographies of Muslim Identities: Diaspora, Gender and Belonging

Geographies of Muslim Identities: Diaspora, Gender and Belonging

Geographies of Muslim Identities: Diaspora, Gender and Belonging

Geographies of Muslim Identities: Diaspora, Gender and Belonging

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Overview

In recent years, geographies of identities, including those of ethnicity, religion, 'race' and gender, have formed an increasing focus of contemporary human geography. The events of September 11th, 2001 particularly illustrated the ways in which identities can be transformed across time and space by both global and local events of a social, cultural, political and economic nature. Such transformations have also demonstrated the temporal and spatial construction of hate and fear, and of increasing incidences of 'Islamophobia' through the construction of Muslims as 'the Other'. As the social scientific study of religion continues to be marginalized within mainstream scholarship, there remains an important gap in the literature.

This timely book addresses this gap by collecting a range of cutting-edge contributions from the social, cultural, political, historical and economic sub-disciplines of geography, together with writings from gender studies, cultural studies and leisure studies where research has revealed a strong spatial dimension to the construction, representation, contestation and reworking of Muslim identities. The contributors illustrate the ways in which such identities are constructed, represented, negotiated and contested in everyday life in a wide variety of international contexts, focusing upon issues connected with diaspora, gender and belonging.



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781409487470
Publisher: Ashgate Publishing Ltd
Publication date: 11/28/2012
Series: Re-materialising Cultural Geography
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Professor Cara Aitchison is Dean of the Faculty of Education and Sport at the University of Bedfordshire, UK. Peter Hopkins is Lecturer in Social Geography, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne and Mei-Po Kwan is Distinguished Professor of Social and Behavioral Sciences in the Department of Geography at the Ohio State University, USA.

Peter E. Hopkins, Mei-Po Kwan, Cara Carmichael Aitchison, Patricia Ehrkamp, Cameron McAuliffe, Sadiq Mir, Gabriele Marranci, Sonja van Wichelen, Eileen Green, Carrie Singleton, Tess Kay, William C. Rowe, Samuel Zalanga.


Table of Contents

Contents: Introduction: geographies of Muslim identities, Peter E. Hopkins, Mei-Po Kwan and Cara Carmichael Aitchison; Beyond the mosque: Turkish immigrants and the practice and politics of Islam in Duisburg-Marxloh, Germany, Patricia Ehrkamp; Visible minorities; constructing and deconstructing the 'Muslim Iranian' diaspora, Cameron McAuliffe; 'The other within the same': some aspects of Scottish-Pakistani identity in suburban Glasgow, Sadiq Mir; Migration and construction of women's identity in Northern Ireland, Gabriele Marranci; Reconstructing 'Muslimness': new bodies in urban Indonesia, Sonja van Wichelen;'Safe and risky spaces': gender, ethnicity and culture in the leisure lives of young South Asian women, Eileen Green and Carrie Singleton; Daughters of Islam, sisters in sport, Tess Kay; Cultural Muslims: the evolution of Muslim identity in Soviet and post-Soviet Central Asia, William C. Rowe; Islam and national development: a cross-cultural comparison of the role of religion in the process of economic development and cultural change, Samuel Zalanga; Young Muslim men's experiences of local landscapes after 11 September 2001, Peter E. Hopkins; Index.


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