Description

Book Synopsis
Attiya Ahmad examines the practice of conversion to Islam by South Asian migrant domestic workers in the Arabian Peninsula and Persian Gulf region and how these women's conversions stem from an ongoing process rooted in their everyday experiences as migrant workers rather than a clean break from their preexisting lives.

Trade Review
"[T]his study offers new insights into the inner-workings of migration and breaks from static readings of religious conversions. . . . Bridging the gap between religion and migration is an important direction in scholarship on transnationalism, and Ahmad’s work markedly joins other projects on this urgent venture." -- Sasha Sabherwal * Anthropological Quarterly *
"Everyday Conversions is a poignant and patient engagement with the gendered spaces and relations that are easy to overlook but are vital to state formation, social reproduction and religious life in multiple countries." -- Leya Mathew * Contemporary South Asia *
“An enormous contribution. Everyday Conversions will be of interest to a variety of people—those interested in Islam, migrant experiences, the Indian Ocean world, and gender studies, especially.” -- Keely Sutton * Reading Religion *
Everyday Conversions is not only a valuable addition to the growing literature on Gulf identities, but also to the wider literature on religion, belonging and identity.” -- Idil Akinci * Ethnic and Racial Studies *
"Beautifully written . . . Attiya Ahmad’s groundbreaking research sheds light on the complex process of conversion and the ways that South Asian migrant women domestic workers in Kuwait rework their lives and reshape their sense of self and belonging." -- Claire Beaugrand * Journal of Middle East Women's Studies *
"This beautifully written book . . . skillfully weaves together women’s stories, which are contextualized within the history of the Indian Ocean trade, the feminization of Kuwait’s labour market, and the Islamic revival movement. A
significant addition to scholarship on foreign workers in the Gulf, Attiya Ahmad’s volume adds ethnographic material that is missing from other studies: details of private religious lives." -- Mara A. Leichtman * Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute *
"Everyday Conversions was very enjoyable to read; it was very thoughtful and thought-provoking in making sure that these women spoke their own truth. . . . The book expresses the intricacies of navigating one’s conditions between doing what one must do with meeting one’s basic human needs." -- Mirna Lattouf * Journal of Women of the Middle East and the Islamic World *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. Everyday Conversions 1
1. Temporariness 37
2. Suspension 67
3. Naram 101
4. Housetalk 124
5. Fitra 157
Epilogue. Ongoing Conversions 191
Appendix 1. Notes on Fieldwork 201
Appendix 2. Interlocutors' Names and Connections to One Another 207
Glossary 211
Notes 219
References 245
Index 265

Everyday Conversions

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    A Hardback by Attiya Ahmad

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      View other formats and editions of Everyday Conversions by Attiya Ahmad

      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 29/03/2017
      ISBN13: 9780822363330, 978-0822363330
      ISBN10: 082236333X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Attiya Ahmad examines the practice of conversion to Islam by South Asian migrant domestic workers in the Arabian Peninsula and Persian Gulf region and how these women's conversions stem from an ongoing process rooted in their everyday experiences as migrant workers rather than a clean break from their preexisting lives.

      Trade Review
      "[T]his study offers new insights into the inner-workings of migration and breaks from static readings of religious conversions. . . . Bridging the gap between religion and migration is an important direction in scholarship on transnationalism, and Ahmad’s work markedly joins other projects on this urgent venture." -- Sasha Sabherwal * Anthropological Quarterly *
      "Everyday Conversions is a poignant and patient engagement with the gendered spaces and relations that are easy to overlook but are vital to state formation, social reproduction and religious life in multiple countries." -- Leya Mathew * Contemporary South Asia *
      “An enormous contribution. Everyday Conversions will be of interest to a variety of people—those interested in Islam, migrant experiences, the Indian Ocean world, and gender studies, especially.” -- Keely Sutton * Reading Religion *
      Everyday Conversions is not only a valuable addition to the growing literature on Gulf identities, but also to the wider literature on religion, belonging and identity.” -- Idil Akinci * Ethnic and Racial Studies *
      "Beautifully written . . . Attiya Ahmad’s groundbreaking research sheds light on the complex process of conversion and the ways that South Asian migrant women domestic workers in Kuwait rework their lives and reshape their sense of self and belonging." -- Claire Beaugrand * Journal of Middle East Women's Studies *
      "This beautifully written book . . . skillfully weaves together women’s stories, which are contextualized within the history of the Indian Ocean trade, the feminization of Kuwait’s labour market, and the Islamic revival movement. A
      significant addition to scholarship on foreign workers in the Gulf, Attiya Ahmad’s volume adds ethnographic material that is missing from other studies: details of private religious lives." -- Mara A. Leichtman * Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute *
      "Everyday Conversions was very enjoyable to read; it was very thoughtful and thought-provoking in making sure that these women spoke their own truth. . . . The book expresses the intricacies of navigating one’s conditions between doing what one must do with meeting one’s basic human needs." -- Mirna Lattouf * Journal of Women of the Middle East and the Islamic World *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments ix
      Introduction. Everyday Conversions 1
      1. Temporariness 37
      2. Suspension 67
      3. Naram 101
      4. Housetalk 124
      5. Fitra 157
      Epilogue. Ongoing Conversions 191
      Appendix 1. Notes on Fieldwork 201
      Appendix 2. Interlocutors' Names and Connections to One Another 207
      Glossary 211
      Notes 219
      References 245
      Index 265

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