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Doctoral thesis: Towards a transnational Islam

Young muslims are moving from an Islam based on the culture of their homeland to an increasingly transnationally embedded Islam of Muslims from many different countries and cultures. That’s one of the findings in the doctoral thesis by Norwegian anthropologist Christine M. Jacobsen that is now no longer available online. (UPDATE 26.3.2020)

Contributing to an emerging “anthropology of Islam in Europe”, she writes, her thesis is concerned with exploring continuities and discontinuities in religious identities and practices in a context of international migration and globalization. She has conducted fieldwork among youth and students who participate in two Islamic organizations in Oslo.

The situation of belonging to a minority group, she writes, means that young Muslims cannot take their religion for granted, and that they must engage in the redefinition of identity/difference and of Islamic traditions. And in this redefinition, young Muslims increasingly aspire to engage directly with Islamic texts in order to “choose” which position or interpretation to adhere to. They increasingly engage in discussion and debate on issues that were previously mainly an area of scholarly debate.

In order to make this thesis relevant to the broader comparative field of studies of Islam in Europe, Jacobsen draws on insights from studies of young Muslims elsewhere in Europe.

She criticizes the prevailing methodological nationalism in studies on immigrants and migration (the paradigm of the nation-state as the principle organizing unit of society). She writes:

Discussions about integration often ignore distinctions related to e.g. class, generation, gender, and urban processes, and tend to reify the distinction between “Us” (the Norwegian society representing Norwegian values) and “Them” (being the foreigners that must be integrated). Often, such discussions proceed without questioning the premises upon which our understanding of “integration” depends, and the way in which integration is part of a nation-making process.

In research that is based in political-administrative and methodological nationalist perspective, immigrants and the cultural and religious forms they represent tend to be constructed as “social problems” and “deviance” that need to be solved and brought into order through governing processes (Lithman 2004).

An example is the issue of arranged marriage:

Depending on the perspective adopted, arranged marriage might appear as an issue of deviancy among immigrants or as a part of how a majority of mankind organizes its social life. The consequences for anthropology as cultural critique are obviously important. When immigrants and the social and cultural forms they represent are constructed as “social problems” and “deviance”, they can neither allow worthwhile and interesting critiques of “our own society”, nor enlighten us about other human possibilities, to paraphrase Marcus and Fischer.

Within this nationalistic perspective, Islam is usually approached in terms of how it hinders or facilitates the “integration” of “Muslim immigrants” into “Norway” (or other European societies, “the West”). Studies of Muslims in Europe based on what Lithman calls “wonderment over society” seem to be less frequent, she writes:

When framed within the perspective of a nationalist methodology, this endeavour necessarily must result in ethnocentrism. Furthermore, this perspective has certain consequences not only for the description of the social and cultural aspects involved in migration, but also for its moral evaluation and as a basis for policy making.

She prefers “methodological relativism”:

Even though it is impossible to exclude all value-assumptions from research, I find striving towards considering different practices and traditions on their own terms worthwhile. If not, it is difficult to grasp the meaningfulness of social and cultural practices to the people that engage in them, or to see them as alternative ways of organizing human life, rather than just as deviance from a norm.

>> Download the thesis Staying on the straight path: Religious identities and practices among young muslims in Norway by Christine M. Jacobsen (BORA, Bergen Open Research Archive)

For those who read Norwegian: I’ve interviewed Christine M. Jacobsen a few weeks ago, see Doktorgrad på unge norske muslimer: På vei til en transnasjonal islam

LINKS UPDATED 26.3.2020

SEE ALSO:

Andreas Wimmer and Nina Glick Schiller: Methodological nationalism and beyond: Nation building, migration and the social sciences (pdf)

Why the French Don’t Like Headscarves

Muslims in Calcutta: Towards a middle-class & moderation

What does it mean to be Muslim in a secular society? Anthropologist thinks ahead

Islam in Morocco: TV and Internet more important than mosques

Lila Abu-Lughod: It’s time to give up the Western obsession with veiled Muslim women

Young muslims are moving from an Islam based on the culture of their homeland to an increasingly transnationally embedded Islam of Muslims from many different countries and cultures. That's one of the findings in the doctoral thesis by Norwegian…

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2006 – The Year of Open Access Anthropology?

(post in progress) 2005 was the year anthropology finally became visible on the internet. 2006 was the year of a more public, political and open access anthropology?

Open Access

More and more anthropologists want to make their research available online. Two years ago, the open access movement was only known to some geeks. Now, more and more academics know of its existence and support its agenda. I’ve even read about Norwegian researchers who boycott publishers that don’t support Open Access (only in Norwegian). Recently, Norwegian libraries rejected Blackwell journals because of high prices and at the same time promoted their digital archives.

The bloggers at Savage Minds and Anthropology.net campaigned for more open access with New Open Access Anthropology Website, mailinglist, chat and t-shirts including a blog.

A new Open Access journal called After Culture – Emergent Anthropologies was announced and a few months ago, I’ve discovered Anpere – Anthropological Perspectives on Religion another new Open Access Anthropology Journal and shortly afterwards lots of new theses on indigenous research in MUNIN – the digital library of the University in Tromsø (Northern Norway).

Earlier, the American Anthropological Society was heavily criticized for its opposition to Open Access. Concerning their reluctance to use digital technology to disseminate knowledge, Jane Mejdahl from the new Danish Anthropology group blog Matters Out Of Place wondered if anthropologists were the last primitive tribe on earth. To promote anthropological blogging, anthropology.net established the first Anthropology Blog Carnival.

Politics and Public Anthropology

Last year, anthropology seemed to have become politicised. American anthropologists stood up against torture and the occupation of Iraq and used anthropology to show that the Bush administration is lying about the “war on terror” in the Sahara.

Furthermore, anthropologists criticized both the erosion of free academic speech in the USA, how censorship threatens anthropological fieldwork and the neoliberalism in academia, when Walmart’s management principles run an anthropology department.

In 2005, many debates arose on how CIA sponsers anthropologists to gather sensitive information. In 2006, we could read about anthropologists who are engaged for the US war in Iraq and “embedded anthropology” in the Canadian military.

It’s difficult to say if anthropologists have been more visible in mainstream media during the last year. We might remember that Didier Fassin criticized anthropologists for their silence during and after the riots in France. Maybe Indonesia can be an example. To link themselves to the non-academic world, anthropologists discuss politics and succeeded according anthropologist Fadjar I. Thufail. In Mexico, anthropologists who demonstrated against human rights abuses were beaten by the Mexican police.

Conferences and cosmopolitanism

Personally, I was engaged in discussions about conference culture. My post How To Present A Paper – or Can Anthropologists Talk? received more comments than any other post before. Shortly afterwards I went to the conference Anthropology and Cosmopolitanism at Keele University where I heard many weak presentations and wrote the post What’s the point of anthropology conferences?. My summary was later published in Anthropology Today and was commented by Don Moody. Concerning presentations, “the cure is a strong chairman and a system of lights”, he wrote.

I’ve written lots about cosmopolitanism, for example For an anthropology of cosmopolitanism or Thomas Hylland Eriksen: Cosmopolitanism is like respecting the ban on smoking in the public. Owen Sichone showed at the conference that poor African migrants are no less cosmopolitan than anthropologists and David Graeber argued that democracy is no ‘Western’ idea and questioned the terms “Western civilisation” or “Western values”.

There were of course lots more interesting news last year.

I especially enjoyed reading Jan Kåre Breivik’s book about deaf people as a forgotten cultural minority and Marianne Gullestads most recent book where she defines the five major challenges for anthropology

2006 is also the year when Clifford Geertz has passed away.

SEE ALSO:

Savage Minds: 2006 Highlights

The Anthropology Year 2005

(post in progress) 2005 was the year anthropology finally became visible on the internet. 2006 was the year of a more public, political and open access anthropology?

Open Access

More and more anthropologists want to make their research available online. Two years…

Read more

Some new anthropology blogs and websites (round-up part 1)

More and more anthropologists are blogging. Here a short overview over new websites and blogs that I’ve added recently to the “anthropology newspaper” sites http://www.antropologi.info/blog and http://www.antropologi.info/feeds/anthropology

Material World
Lots of longer articles (less “bloggy” than conventional blogs) in this group blog of scholars working in the anthropology departments of University College London and New York University. It “aims to create a new international community of academics, students, curators, artists and anyone else with particular interests in material and visual culture” (via announcement at Museum Anthropology).

Linguistic Anthropology
A (more “bloggy”) group blog from the members of the Linguistic Anthropology e-mail list (via announcement at Savage Minds).

Northern Waterways
Blog by cultural anthropologist Ed Labenski about northern Canadian anthropology, aboriginal rights and resource development and canoeing (via announcement at Fieldnotes).

Locating Ethnography
Blog by anthropologist Michaela Lord (University of Hull, UK). She’s finally started blogging about her research about British migrants in France.

Intute Social Sciences Blog
General university, education and social science news by Intute ( service created by a network of UK universities and partners)

warauduati
German anthropologist Marc Murschhauser has promised to blog more about his fieldwork, “taking interviews, observating culture, asking the right questions, writing notes, and living within difficult conditions”.

Culture Matters
Engaged blog by students and staff of applied anthropology at Macquarie University (Australia) about emergent trends in applied anthropology.

Critically Cultural
Blog by anthropologist Amelia Guimarin who is especially interested in visual media, for example body piercing.

Anthropology 2.0
Website by Marc K. Hebert from the University of South Florida, where he is pursuing a Ph.D. in Applied Anthropology. Focus on how new media can contribute to a more public anthropology.

Understanding Race
New website by the American Anthropological Association, including a blog, papers and presentations.

Two bloggers have moved their blogs.
Sarapen has moved from edublogs to anthroblogs. The new address of his blog about online anthropology on Filipino bloggers is http://www.anthroblogs.org/sarapen/ .
Anthronaut, currently on fieldwork in Peru has moved to wordpress.com and can now be found at http://anthronaut.wordpress.com/

Have i forgotten some new (social-) anthropology blogs?

UPDATE:

Student Anthropologists
Blog that was established during the 2006 AAA meeting. Now it also includes a forum, a wiki and bookmarks (del.icio.us)

SEE ALSO:

antropologi.info survey: Six anthropologists on Anthropology and Internet

On fieldwork: “Blogging sharpens the attention”

More and more blogging anthropologists – but the digital divide persists

New blog: The Anthropologists – Last primitive tribe on earth?

More and more anthropologists are blogging. Here a short overview over new websites and blogs that I've added recently to the "anthropology newspaper" sites http://www.antropologi.info/blog and http://www.antropologi.info/feeds/anthropology

Material World
Lots of longer articles (less "bloggy" than conventional blogs) in this group blog…

Read more

Kvinner nekter å stille opp i media

Media (inkl blogging) og forskning er fortsatt manneting. Ifølge Morgenbladets kilder er det kvinnenes egen feil at de er nesten fraværende i media. – Kvinnelige akademikere sier ofte nei. Noen ganger kunne jeg ringe ti damer for hver mann, sier Roy Tore Jensen fra TV 2 til Morgenbladet. Cathrine Sandnes, redaktør i Samtiden og tidligere kulturredaktør i Dagsavisen er enig:

– Det er utrolig seig materie å få kvinner til å stille opp. De vegrer seg for å fremstå unyanserte, frykter reaksjoner fra fagmiljøet og vil ikke stemples som medienisser. Slik må kvinnelige akademikere selv ta en del av skylden for at de ikke er bedre representert. Når du har holdt på en halv dag med å ringe kvinnelige eksperter som sier nei er det lettere å ringe den kjente mannlige professoren med en gang.

Nå er det bare 15 kvinner på Morgenbladets liste over de 100 mest omtalte professorene i media. Samtidig er bare 17 prosent av professorene kvinner. Så ille er det vel ikke likevel? Og hvordan hadde kjønnsbalansen vært hvis en ikke bare hadde undersøkt professorenes plass i media?

Thomas Hylland Eriksen er forresten på plass 6, og Unni Wikan på plass 23.

>> les hele saken i Morgenbladet

Men at kvinner nekter å stå fram med sine meninger ser en også i bloggverdenen. Og hvis kvinner blogger, så ofte anonymt (mitt inntrykk, burde sjekkes nøyere). Antropologi er et jentefag (80% av studentene omtrent – og ikke bare i Norge), men antropologi-bloggene gir et motsatt inntrykk (dominert av menn). Kan også legge til at alle avisredaksjoner som jeg har jobbet i var dominert av menn.

SE OGSÅ:

Jantelov på Blindern? Ingen plass for sterke meninger?

More and more anthropologists, but they’re absent from public debates – Thomas Hylland Eriksen’s “Engaging Anthropology”

– Antropologer må bli flinkere til å bruke nettet

– UiO profesjonaliserer informasjonsformidling, bidrar til en svekket presse

Media (inkl blogging) og forskning er fortsatt manneting. Ifølge Morgenbladets kilder er det kvinnenes egen feil at de er nesten fraværende i media. - Kvinnelige akademikere sier ofte nei. Noen ganger kunne jeg ringe ti damer for hver mann, sier…

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Frauenpower, Juden und Muslime: Journal Ethnologie 1/2007 über den Iran

Viel Interessantes gibt es zu lesen in der neuen Ausgabe von Journal Ethnologie zum Thema Iran, die in Kooperation mit der iranischen Ethnologin Shahnaz Nadjmabadi entstanden ist.

Hier ein Ueberblick ueber die Texte:

Mehdy Naficy: Die Jüdische Anlage in Isfahan, Iran. Ein Feldforschungsbericht
Wenn man in der Geschichte zurückblickt, so waren die Beziehungen zwischen Juden und Muslimen weniger spannungsreich als die zwischen Juden und Christen. Vor allem das Verhältnis der Juden zu den Iranern (Persern) war immer gut, und historische Fakten belegen diese Aussage.

Ulrich Marzolph: Der Märtyrer und das Paradies. Schiitische Megaposter als Ausdruck des normativen Gedenkens
Wer heute nach Teheran reist, dem wird bereits bei der Fahrt vom Flughafen ins Zentrum ein Phänomen auffallen, das besonders in den späten 1990er-Jahren immer mehr um sich gegriffen hat: Die zu den Straßen hin liegenden fensterlosen Wände der großen Wohnblocks und Geschäftshäuser sind mit Megapostern verziert. Sie sind ein von religiös-politischen Organisationen genutztes Medium, die Märtyrer darstellen, die im Dienste des schiitisch-islamischen Bekenntnisses ihr Leben gelassen haben.

Erika Friedl: Dornen im Ehebett. Eheprobleme im modernen Iran
Es gibt mehr und mehr unverheiratete junge Menschen, die im Elternhaus, in Studentenheimen Wohngemeinschaften und – in den Städten – auch ganz allein leben. Aber auch die Scheidungszahlen steigen an. Junge Leute lassen sich nicht mehr einfach von den Eltern verheiraten, sie verlangen zumindest Mitspracherecht in der Wahl des Ehepartners. Überall im Iran wird über diese neuen sozialen Trends diskutiert.

Mary Elaine Hegland: Großmutter lebt allein in ihrem Häuschen. Alte Frauen in einem iranischen Dorf
Es ist nicht mehr selbstverständlich, dass eine Schwiegertochter der Mutter ihres Mannes ohne Widerrede gehorcht, für sie arbeitet, oder sich von ihr bekritteln oder kontrollieren lässt. Dieser Wandel von traditionellen zu modernen persönlichen Beziehungen hat schwerwiegenden Einfluss auf das Leben der älteren Frauen.

Barbara Aboueldahab: “Wir können auch denken!” Iranische Frauenpower bei der RoboCup Soccer-WM 2006
In einem fußballverrückten Land wie dem Iran macht auch dieser Sport vor den Frauen nicht halt. Laut Umfragen sind 60 Prozent aller Fußballfans weiblich. Diese Fußballbegeisterung könnte auch der Grund für die hohe Beteiligung von iranischen Frauen bei der diesjährigen Roboter-Fußball-WM, dem RoboCup sein.

Shahnaz Nadjmabadi: Bandar-e Lengeh, die „Braut“ am Persischen Golf. Eine Ethnologin unter Seeleuten
Der Prozess der sich im Wandel befindenden lokalen Handelstradition in Bandar-e Lengeh und die Entschlüsselung der Netzwerke, die die iranische und arabische Welt miteinander verbinden, stehen im Mittelpunkt meiner ethnologischen Forschungen in diesem Raum.

SIEHE AUCH:

Oxford to Host First Conference on Visual Anthropology of Iran

Visual ethnography and Kurdish anthropology by Kameel Ahmady

Censorship of research in the USA: Iranians not allowed to publish papers

Viel Interessantes gibt es zu lesen in der neuen Ausgabe von Journal Ethnologie zum Thema Iran, die in Kooperation mit der iranischen Ethnologin Shahnaz Nadjmabadi entstanden ist.

Hier ein Ueberblick ueber die Texte:

Mehdy Naficy: Die Jüdische Anlage in Isfahan, Iran. Ein…

Read more