Buying modern: Muslim subjectivity, the West and patterns of religious consumption in Lahore, Pakistan

This paper explores the emerging patterns of religious consumption in urban Lahore. The popularity and sale of headscarves, CDs and DVDs of sermons, Islamic mobile ringtones is often determined by their perceived popularity amongst the Muslim diaspora in the West. This paper analyses the reasons beh...

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Main Author: Ammara Maqsood
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh Library 2012-09-01
Series:The South Asianist
Online Access:http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/48
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author Ammara Maqsood
author_facet Ammara Maqsood
author_sort Ammara Maqsood
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description This paper explores the emerging patterns of religious consumption in urban Lahore. The popularity and sale of headscarves, CDs and DVDs of sermons, Islamic mobile ringtones is often determined by their perceived popularity amongst the Muslim diaspora in the West. This paper analyses the reasons behind this pattern and argues that it is linked to local perspectives on ‘being modern’. By looking at the role of religious consumption in creating Muslim subjectivity, it shows that Muslims in Lahore increasingly want to buy goods that show them as ‘rational’ and ‘forward thinking’, ideas which they closely associate with modern-ness. Embedded in these decisions and understanding of ‘being modern’ is a problematic relationship with the West where it is seen as centre of modernity but its modernity is not accepted entirely and is countered by using religious consumption to build a modern Muslim identity.
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spelling doaj.art-1444f6b778dc4eadbd659350c233ac962022-12-21T18:44:33ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryThe South Asianist2050-487X2012-09-011248Buying modern: Muslim subjectivity, the West and patterns of religious consumption in Lahore, PakistanAmmara MaqsoodThis paper explores the emerging patterns of religious consumption in urban Lahore. The popularity and sale of headscarves, CDs and DVDs of sermons, Islamic mobile ringtones is often determined by their perceived popularity amongst the Muslim diaspora in the West. This paper analyses the reasons behind this pattern and argues that it is linked to local perspectives on ‘being modern’. By looking at the role of religious consumption in creating Muslim subjectivity, it shows that Muslims in Lahore increasingly want to buy goods that show them as ‘rational’ and ‘forward thinking’, ideas which they closely associate with modern-ness. Embedded in these decisions and understanding of ‘being modern’ is a problematic relationship with the West where it is seen as centre of modernity but its modernity is not accepted entirely and is countered by using religious consumption to build a modern Muslim identity.http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/48
spellingShingle Ammara Maqsood
Buying modern: Muslim subjectivity, the West and patterns of religious consumption in Lahore, Pakistan
The South Asianist
title Buying modern: Muslim subjectivity, the West and patterns of religious consumption in Lahore, Pakistan
title_full Buying modern: Muslim subjectivity, the West and patterns of religious consumption in Lahore, Pakistan
title_fullStr Buying modern: Muslim subjectivity, the West and patterns of religious consumption in Lahore, Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Buying modern: Muslim subjectivity, the West and patterns of religious consumption in Lahore, Pakistan
title_short Buying modern: Muslim subjectivity, the West and patterns of religious consumption in Lahore, Pakistan
title_sort buying modern muslim subjectivity the west and patterns of religious consumption in lahore pakistan
url http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/48
work_keys_str_mv AT ammaramaqsood buyingmodernmuslimsubjectivitythewestandpatternsofreligiousconsumptioninlahorepakistan