Two Strangers in the Eternal City: Border Thinking and Individualized Emerging Rituals as Anti-Patriarchal Epistemology

This paper is a work of autoethnography in which I (the author) observe critical practices that I and my colleague, Aisha, thought, said, and embodied during our tenure as the only Muslim Nostra Aetate Fellows at the St. Catherine Center for Interreligious Dialogue in the Vatican City, Italy. The pa...

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Main Author: Lailatul Fitriyah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-12-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/14/1/29
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author Lailatul Fitriyah
author_facet Lailatul Fitriyah
author_sort Lailatul Fitriyah
collection DOAJ
description This paper is a work of autoethnography in which I (the author) observe critical practices that I and my colleague, Aisha, thought, said, and embodied during our tenure as the only Muslim Nostra Aetate Fellows at the St. Catherine Center for Interreligious Dialogue in the Vatican City, Italy. The paper focuses on our survival strategies that took on an interreligious and anti-patriarchal character within our interreligious, Muslim–Christian encounters. The framework of border thinking, as theorized by Maria Lugones and Gloria Anzaldúa, and the concept of emerging rituals proposed by Ronald Grimes, will serve as analytical tools to understand our practices. I argue that our embodied thoughts and practices, as seen from the lenses of emerging rituals and border thinking, represent an anti-patriarchal, interreligious epistemology that questions and deconstructs the hegemonic presence of patriarchal Catholic praxis around us within that specific context.
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spelling doaj.art-42238873b8434740b634fa45677f99462023-12-01T00:16:36ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442022-12-011412910.3390/rel14010029Two Strangers in the Eternal City: Border Thinking and Individualized Emerging Rituals as Anti-Patriarchal EpistemologyLailatul Fitriyah0Claremont School of Theology, Claremont, CA 91711, USAThis paper is a work of autoethnography in which I (the author) observe critical practices that I and my colleague, Aisha, thought, said, and embodied during our tenure as the only Muslim Nostra Aetate Fellows at the St. Catherine Center for Interreligious Dialogue in the Vatican City, Italy. The paper focuses on our survival strategies that took on an interreligious and anti-patriarchal character within our interreligious, Muslim–Christian encounters. The framework of border thinking, as theorized by Maria Lugones and Gloria Anzaldúa, and the concept of emerging rituals proposed by Ronald Grimes, will serve as analytical tools to understand our practices. I argue that our embodied thoughts and practices, as seen from the lenses of emerging rituals and border thinking, represent an anti-patriarchal, interreligious epistemology that questions and deconstructs the hegemonic presence of patriarchal Catholic praxis around us within that specific context.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/14/1/29interreligious dialogueanti-patriarchalfeminismborder thinkingemerging ritualsautoethnography
spellingShingle Lailatul Fitriyah
Two Strangers in the Eternal City: Border Thinking and Individualized Emerging Rituals as Anti-Patriarchal Epistemology
Religions
interreligious dialogue
anti-patriarchal
feminism
border thinking
emerging rituals
autoethnography
title Two Strangers in the Eternal City: Border Thinking and Individualized Emerging Rituals as Anti-Patriarchal Epistemology
title_full Two Strangers in the Eternal City: Border Thinking and Individualized Emerging Rituals as Anti-Patriarchal Epistemology
title_fullStr Two Strangers in the Eternal City: Border Thinking and Individualized Emerging Rituals as Anti-Patriarchal Epistemology
title_full_unstemmed Two Strangers in the Eternal City: Border Thinking and Individualized Emerging Rituals as Anti-Patriarchal Epistemology
title_short Two Strangers in the Eternal City: Border Thinking and Individualized Emerging Rituals as Anti-Patriarchal Epistemology
title_sort two strangers in the eternal city border thinking and individualized emerging rituals as anti patriarchal epistemology
topic interreligious dialogue
anti-patriarchal
feminism
border thinking
emerging rituals
autoethnography
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/14/1/29
work_keys_str_mv AT lailatulfitriyah twostrangersintheeternalcityborderthinkingandindividualizedemergingritualsasantipatriarchalepistemology