The Tablighi Jama'at (TJ) is widely regarded as the largest movement of grassroots Islamic revival in the world yet remains significantly under-researched. This thesis examines the British branch of the movement based on sustained ethnographic fieldwork conducted over 18 months. Intensive participant observation was combined with 59 semi-structured interviews to present a detailed typology and topography of the movement's organisational structure in Britain. Further, the issue of intergenerational transmission is explored – based on an analysis of the cultural identity markers of language, clothing and food – with clear shifts identified between the first-generation 'Old Guard' and the British-born 'Avant-Garde.' The thesis argues that ...
The controversial events of 2001 (9/11) and 2005 (7/7) have led Britain’s media and policy makers to...
According to some sociologists, one of the hallmarks of modernity is the end of ‘pre-determine...
This paper interfaces a specific theory of socialisation, derived from Peter Berger and Thomas Luckm...
The Tablighi Jama'at (TJ) is widely regarded as the largest movement of grassroots Islamic revival i...
Since its inception in 1920s British India, the Tablighi Jama’at (TJ) has grown into a global moveme...
Jamaat, a transnational Islamic reform movement, which originated in India in the 1920s. The movemen...
This thesis investigates the turn to a neo-revivalist Muslim identity in the West as a form of self-...
This article examines the emergence of new forms of Islam in Britain between the 1990s and the prese...
Against the context of work in the anthropology of pilgrimage on contesting the sacred (Eade and Sal...
The Tablighi Jama’at (TJ) is widely regarded as the largest grassroots Islamic revival movement in t...
It is often hypothesized that at times of social change and identity confusion, lslamist and reactiv...
Much nuance and variability have been lost in the process of the reductivist analysis of Islam post ...
The ‘remaking' of the Muslim as an integral part of a global attempt at reviving Islam has emerged i...
Since the great Iranian revolution of 1978-79, there has been a significant increase inIslamic consc...
The thesis examines the extent to which the Tablighi Jamaat (TJ) as an Islamic, theocratic and socia...
The controversial events of 2001 (9/11) and 2005 (7/7) have led Britain’s media and policy makers to...
According to some sociologists, one of the hallmarks of modernity is the end of ‘pre-determine...
This paper interfaces a specific theory of socialisation, derived from Peter Berger and Thomas Luckm...
The Tablighi Jama'at (TJ) is widely regarded as the largest movement of grassroots Islamic revival i...
Since its inception in 1920s British India, the Tablighi Jama’at (TJ) has grown into a global moveme...
Jamaat, a transnational Islamic reform movement, which originated in India in the 1920s. The movemen...
This thesis investigates the turn to a neo-revivalist Muslim identity in the West as a form of self-...
This article examines the emergence of new forms of Islam in Britain between the 1990s and the prese...
Against the context of work in the anthropology of pilgrimage on contesting the sacred (Eade and Sal...
The Tablighi Jama’at (TJ) is widely regarded as the largest grassroots Islamic revival movement in t...
It is often hypothesized that at times of social change and identity confusion, lslamist and reactiv...
Much nuance and variability have been lost in the process of the reductivist analysis of Islam post ...
The ‘remaking' of the Muslim as an integral part of a global attempt at reviving Islam has emerged i...
Since the great Iranian revolution of 1978-79, there has been a significant increase inIslamic consc...
The thesis examines the extent to which the Tablighi Jamaat (TJ) as an Islamic, theocratic and socia...
The controversial events of 2001 (9/11) and 2005 (7/7) have led Britain’s media and policy makers to...
According to some sociologists, one of the hallmarks of modernity is the end of ‘pre-determine...
This paper interfaces a specific theory of socialisation, derived from Peter Berger and Thomas Luckm...