Religious rules and thick description: thoughts from the anthropology of Islam

The recent anthropology of ethics has sought to look beyond rules to themes such as the cultivation of the virtuous self. Anthropology generally has grown impatient with what Bourdieu called ‘the fallacies of the rule’ as a key term for describing the social. But rules remain a crucial dimension of...

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Yazar: Clarke, M
Materyal Türü: Journal article
Dil:English
Baskı/Yayın Bilgisi: Suomen Antropologinen Seura 2022
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author Clarke, M
author_facet Clarke, M
author_sort Clarke, M
collection OXFORD
description The recent anthropology of ethics has sought to look beyond rules to themes such as the cultivation of the virtuous self. Anthropology generally has grown impatient with what Bourdieu called ‘the fallacies of the rule’ as a key term for describing the social. But rules remain a crucial dimension of ethical practice in many contexts, including religious ones. This article focuses on British Muslim conceptions and practice of the religious rules of Islam in order to highlight the complexity, diversity, and subtlety of everyday practices of rule-following. Sticking to the rules, even in the non-Muslim majority setting of the UK, is important to many, although what it means to follow the rules and how to do so are not always straightforward. By going beyond stereotypes of ‘mere’ ‘rigid’ rules, blindly followed or boldly evaded, I demonstrate both the necessity and the possibility of a thicker description of religious rules.
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spelling oxford-uuid:27ac68b0-f1c7-49be-a62a-83c02a9af3232023-01-19T15:27:05ZReligious rules and thick description: thoughts from the anthropology of IslamJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:27ac68b0-f1c7-49be-a62a-83c02a9af323EnglishSymplectic ElementsSuomen Antropologinen Seura2022Clarke, MThe recent anthropology of ethics has sought to look beyond rules to themes such as the cultivation of the virtuous self. Anthropology generally has grown impatient with what Bourdieu called ‘the fallacies of the rule’ as a key term for describing the social. But rules remain a crucial dimension of ethical practice in many contexts, including religious ones. This article focuses on British Muslim conceptions and practice of the religious rules of Islam in order to highlight the complexity, diversity, and subtlety of everyday practices of rule-following. Sticking to the rules, even in the non-Muslim majority setting of the UK, is important to many, although what it means to follow the rules and how to do so are not always straightforward. By going beyond stereotypes of ‘mere’ ‘rigid’ rules, blindly followed or boldly evaded, I demonstrate both the necessity and the possibility of a thicker description of religious rules.
spellingShingle Clarke, M
Religious rules and thick description: thoughts from the anthropology of Islam
title Religious rules and thick description: thoughts from the anthropology of Islam
title_full Religious rules and thick description: thoughts from the anthropology of Islam
title_fullStr Religious rules and thick description: thoughts from the anthropology of Islam
title_full_unstemmed Religious rules and thick description: thoughts from the anthropology of Islam
title_short Religious rules and thick description: thoughts from the anthropology of Islam
title_sort religious rules and thick description thoughts from the anthropology of islam
work_keys_str_mv AT clarkem religiousrulesandthickdescriptionthoughtsfromtheanthropologyofislam