Drawing on five years of field studies in pragmatic- and dogmatic-inclined mosques across Europe, Shariʿa and Life explores how Muslims engage with shariʿa norms in general, and specifically with the challenges they face as Muslims living in majority non-Muslim societies.
The book examines how fatwas (advice on shariʿa-related matters) are quested, negotiated, paraphrased, contested, or ignored in mosques, on the internet, and elsewhere. It also analyses individual strategies, external to religio-legal discourse, through which Muslims mitigate conflicts between interpretations of shariʿa and everyday life.
Among the issues discussed in the book are financial transactions, education, the workplace, sports, electoral participation, Christmas greetings, proselytizing, and the legitimacy of choosing to live in a non-Muslim country. Shifting the focus from the authors and texts of fatwas to their recipients, Shariʿa and Life gives voice to those often left voiceless and demonstrates the great discretion and flexibility with which tensions between shariʿa and life are resolved.
List of Illustrations and Tables
Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration
Introduction
1. The Religious Law of Muslim Minorities
2. Across a Wasati-Salafi Spectrum
3. The Mustafti is the Mufti
4. There’s Shariʿa, and There’s Life
5. A Mission with Few Missionaries
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Height:229
Width:152
Spine:23
Weight:360.00