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Who Are “Muslims in Canada”? An Analysis of the Qualitative Literature from 1997 to 2017
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface ix
- Acknowledgments xiii
- General Introduction: Producing Islam(s) and Muslims in Canada 1
-
Section 1: Examining Knowledge Production on Islam
- Epistemologies of the “Muslim Question” in Europe: On the Politics of Knowledge Production in a Minefield 27
- Research Funding and the Production of Knowledge about Islam: The Case of SSHRC 50
- Creating Ecologies of Knowledge as a MENA Scholar in North America: An Interview with Dr. Lara Deeb 64
- The Study of Islam(s) and Western Academia: An Interview with Anver Emon 76
-
Section 2: Charting the Study of Islam(s) and Muslims in Canada
- Who Are “Muslims in Canada”? An Analysis of the Qualitative Literature from 1997 to 2017 91
- Studying Muslim Minorities in Canada: Pitfalls Facing Researchers Attempting to Turn a Racialized Category into a Category of Analysis 120
- Time for a “Hijab Ban”? The Hypervisibility of Veiling in Scholarship on Islam in North America 137
- Expressions of Sufism in Canada 155
- Unpacking Media Coverage, Islam, and Ismaili Muslims in Canada: An Interview with Karim H. Karim 175
- The Relational Approach to Integration in Canada: An Interview with Abdie Kazemipur 193
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Section 3: Positioning Selves
- Researching One’s Own Community: Reflections from Montreal, Canada 207
- Cooking Up Research: Positionality and the Knowledge Production of Islam(s) 223
- Fieldworking While Veiled: Autoethnography of a Brown + Muslim + Female Researcher in Quebec 241
- The Interplay of Identity in Ethnographic Conversations: The Grammar of Recognition in Conversion Narratives 261
- On Critical Muslim Studies and Islamophobia: An Interview with Jasmin Zine 287
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Section 4: Future Trends
- Mixed-Methods and Comparative Approaches to Studying Muslim Immigrant Women in Canada 299
- Influencing the Public Imaginary: The Case of a Montreal Islamic School 324
- 2(b) or Not 2(b): The Expressive Value of the Niqab 341
- Gendering Everyday Islam, Border-Crossings, and the Production of “Alternative Knowledge” 359
- Dancing between Academia and Activism: An Interview with Katherine Bullock 379
- Contributors 393
- Index 399
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface ix
- Acknowledgments xiii
- General Introduction: Producing Islam(s) and Muslims in Canada 1
-
Section 1: Examining Knowledge Production on Islam
- Epistemologies of the “Muslim Question” in Europe: On the Politics of Knowledge Production in a Minefield 27
- Research Funding and the Production of Knowledge about Islam: The Case of SSHRC 50
- Creating Ecologies of Knowledge as a MENA Scholar in North America: An Interview with Dr. Lara Deeb 64
- The Study of Islam(s) and Western Academia: An Interview with Anver Emon 76
-
Section 2: Charting the Study of Islam(s) and Muslims in Canada
- Who Are “Muslims in Canada”? An Analysis of the Qualitative Literature from 1997 to 2017 91
- Studying Muslim Minorities in Canada: Pitfalls Facing Researchers Attempting to Turn a Racialized Category into a Category of Analysis 120
- Time for a “Hijab Ban”? The Hypervisibility of Veiling in Scholarship on Islam in North America 137
- Expressions of Sufism in Canada 155
- Unpacking Media Coverage, Islam, and Ismaili Muslims in Canada: An Interview with Karim H. Karim 175
- The Relational Approach to Integration in Canada: An Interview with Abdie Kazemipur 193
-
Section 3: Positioning Selves
- Researching One’s Own Community: Reflections from Montreal, Canada 207
- Cooking Up Research: Positionality and the Knowledge Production of Islam(s) 223
- Fieldworking While Veiled: Autoethnography of a Brown + Muslim + Female Researcher in Quebec 241
- The Interplay of Identity in Ethnographic Conversations: The Grammar of Recognition in Conversion Narratives 261
- On Critical Muslim Studies and Islamophobia: An Interview with Jasmin Zine 287
-
Section 4: Future Trends
- Mixed-Methods and Comparative Approaches to Studying Muslim Immigrant Women in Canada 299
- Influencing the Public Imaginary: The Case of a Montreal Islamic School 324
- 2(b) or Not 2(b): The Expressive Value of the Niqab 341
- Gendering Everyday Islam, Border-Crossings, and the Production of “Alternative Knowledge” 359
- Dancing between Academia and Activism: An Interview with Katherine Bullock 379
- Contributors 393
- Index 399