Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

"Hughes has written a one-of-a-kind study of the politics and textures of Muslim marriage in contemporary Jordan. The beautifully-written book explores marriage on multiple scales, from the necessary house to the housing market, the wedding feast to the courthouse, the home wedding to the mass wedding. Engaging multiple theoretical approaches and scholarly traditions, and using rich ethnographic research in Jordan, Hughes shows the importance of the Islamic Movement, the Jordanian government, and major banks to understanding the shape and workings of "affection and mercy" in the country."—Frances S. Hasso, Duke University

"Hughes is a versatile ethnographer. His accounts of Jordanian weddings, the inner workings of the sharia courts, where marriages are certified, the gender counseling and sex education offered to engaged couples by Islamist NGOs, the building and buying of homes for newlyweds — all are captivating and complexly rendered. The centrality of marriage to Jordanian political economy emerges vividly on these pages, as do the joys and frustrations of married life. It is a remarkable study, from start to finish."—Andrew Shryock, University of Michigan

"In this compelling and illuminating account, Geoffrey Hughes vividly demonstrates the productivity of marriage as a lens through which to understand society. Engagingly written, nuanced and ethnographically rich, his rendition of houses, proposals and weddings in Jordan enlarges our comprehension of marriage's enduring significance-a tour de force."—Janet Carsten, University of Edinburgh



Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration
Introduction: A Crisis of Marriage, A Crisis of Legitimacy?
Part I: The House: Changing Conceptions of Property and Domestic Space
1. The House
2. The Housing Market
Part II: The Proposal: Making Persons and Other Moral Agents
3. The Delegation
4. The Courthouse
Part III: The Wedding: Privatizing Joys?
5. The Feast
6. The Chastity Society
Conclusion: Affection and Mercy
Bibliography
Index

Kinship Islam and the Politics of Marriage in

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 7 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Geoffrey F. Hughes

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      View other formats and editions of Kinship Islam and the Politics of Marriage in by Geoffrey F. Hughes

      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 01/06/2021
      ISBN13: 9780253056436, 978-0253056436
      ISBN10: 0253056438

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      "Hughes has written a one-of-a-kind study of the politics and textures of Muslim marriage in contemporary Jordan. The beautifully-written book explores marriage on multiple scales, from the necessary house to the housing market, the wedding feast to the courthouse, the home wedding to the mass wedding. Engaging multiple theoretical approaches and scholarly traditions, and using rich ethnographic research in Jordan, Hughes shows the importance of the Islamic Movement, the Jordanian government, and major banks to understanding the shape and workings of "affection and mercy" in the country."—Frances S. Hasso, Duke University

      "Hughes is a versatile ethnographer. His accounts of Jordanian weddings, the inner workings of the sharia courts, where marriages are certified, the gender counseling and sex education offered to engaged couples by Islamist NGOs, the building and buying of homes for newlyweds — all are captivating and complexly rendered. The centrality of marriage to Jordanian political economy emerges vividly on these pages, as do the joys and frustrations of married life. It is a remarkable study, from start to finish."—Andrew Shryock, University of Michigan

      "In this compelling and illuminating account, Geoffrey Hughes vividly demonstrates the productivity of marriage as a lens through which to understand society. Engagingly written, nuanced and ethnographically rich, his rendition of houses, proposals and weddings in Jordan enlarges our comprehension of marriage's enduring significance-a tour de force."—Janet Carsten, University of Edinburgh



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments
      Note on Transliteration
      Introduction: A Crisis of Marriage, A Crisis of Legitimacy?
      Part I: The House: Changing Conceptions of Property and Domestic Space
      1. The House
      2. The Housing Market
      Part II: The Proposal: Making Persons and Other Moral Agents
      3. The Delegation
      4. The Courthouse
      Part III: The Wedding: Privatizing Joys?
      5. The Feast
      6. The Chastity Society
      Conclusion: Affection and Mercy
      Bibliography
      Index

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