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Projekt Druckansicht

Von Malaysia nach Dubai: Muslimisches Pilgern und Geschlecht im Kontext von Konsumpraktiken

Fachliche Zuordnung Ethnologie und Europäische Ethnologie
Förderung Förderung von 2016 bis 2020
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 324628960
 
Erstellungsjahr 2020

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

The ethnographic project „Von Malaysia nach Dubai: Muslimisches Pilgern und Geschlecht im Kontext von Konsumpraktiken“ pursued one original primary goal: To investigate how consumerist practices are negotiated on a religious journey in a gender-specific and religious way, especially with regard to the body and dress codes, on the level of the female social actors being on pilgrimage. This project was innovative in two areas: (1) Muslim pilgrimage was analysed with a view to gender dynamics, especially concerning the body, from the perspective of female non-Western social actors who travel. Previous research on connections between pilgrimage and gender lacks research on these connections in the context of Muslim pilgrimage and on the investigation of these dynamics in the regional context outside Europe. (2) This perspective of non-Western travellers, in turn, was investigated with regard to the interface between Muslim travel and consuming practices, which, with a view to corporeality, refer to dress codes and dress regulations. Previous research in the field of pilgrimage and consumption is lacking regarding investigation of one concrete religion, on the one hand, and on the differentiation between different forms of pilgrimage, on the other hand. On the basis of ethnographic fieldwork in Malaysia and the United Arab Emirates between 2017 and 2018, this research could eventually show that Malay Malaysian pilgrims consume religious connoted travel packages and, especially the women, shop for (partly) spiritual, gender-specific souvenirs on the trip. Consumption on the religious journey becomes highly gendered. The social actors draw on the commercialization of spirituality, driven by local and global tourism and fashion industries specialized in Islamic-related products, especially gendered garments. An ethnographic research that is furthermore based in feminist gender and intersectionality studies, this study moreover argues that gendered spirituality leads to different, mutually constitutive, gendered and religionized embodied practices of this inner disposition and of femininity or masculinity which eventually challenge gendered social hierarchical orders. Therefore, this research contributes significantly to understanding how gendered meanings and practices of spirituality and faith are redefined or reified in the process of religious travel and consuming practices, and, thereby, informs a wider, interdisciplinary debate on intersectionality, constructions and practices of identity, and mobilities.

Projektbezogene Publikationen (Auswahl)

 
 

Zusatzinformationen

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