Description
Book SynopsisTrade Review"In this penetrating ethnography of religious television in Pakistan, Taha Kazi challenges basic assumptions in the study of the relationship between media and religion. Most importantly, Kazi questions the notion that religious programming in Muslim societies inevitably results in the cultivation of pious Muslim sensibilities, and, instead, brings attention to its contradictory and ambivalent outcomes. Her subtle consideration of the irreverent and critical engagements with Islam that arise from religious programming in Pakistan are based on carefully conducted in-depth fieldwork in Karachi. Religious Television and Pious Authority brings much-needed attention to aspects of Islam's role in Pakistan and the wider world that have been neglected in recent work in the social sciences."—Magnus Marsden, Professor of Social Anthropology, Director of Sussex Asia Centre, University of Sussex
"This book is a careful and persuasive account of the way we should be thinking about relations between religion and media. In Taha Kazi's telling, Pakistan demonstrates how the boundaries between these two domains are today blurred, and the substance of contemporary religion emerges somewhere in between them."—Stewart Hoover, Director, Center for Media, Religion and Culture and Professor of Media Studies, University of Colorado Boulder
"In this pioneering book Kazi analyses the impact of the religious television shows which have proliferated in Pakistan since 2002 when President Musharraf liberalised the media. She demonstrates how these shows led to a reduction in the authority of the ulama, the rise of the non-madrasa trained scholar of Islam, and an audience, often faced by conflicting opinions, which increasingly came to make its own decisions about religious belief and practice. This is an important example of how technological change is bringing about religious change in the Muslim world."—Francis Robinson, Professor of the History of South Asia, Royal Holloway, University of London
Table of ContentsAcknowledgements
Note on Transliteration
Introduction
1. A Background of Religious Programming in Pakistan
2. The Production, Ownership, and Control of Religious Television Shows
3. Doctrinal Activism and Religious Television
4. Religious Authority and Control over Religious Knowledge
5. Self-styled Scholars and Religious Show Hosts: Emerging Sources of Religious Authority
6. Changing Viewer Assessments of Religious Authority
7. Redefining the Boundaries for Critical Deliberation in Islamic Public Debate
Conclusion
Glossary of Arabic Terms
References