This article explores the politics of a family cohesion a Muslim polity simultaneously committed to the application of Islamic law, the preservation of cultural identity, and socio-economic modernization. Thearticle focuses on the work of Qatar’s Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs, a government body that seeks to make Wahhābī Islam relevant to society in the midst of rapid social change. Drawing onan analysis of the Ministry’s fatwas on family life, the article shows how Qatar’s media muftis haveincorporated modern assumptions into their discourse and adjusted to new power configurations. Thedissonance between the discourses articulated within official religious institutions and those found inother state bodies reflects the growing polarization of Qatari society, the normative pluralismundergirding modernization in the Gulf, and the regulatory ambitions of proliferating state institutionsin a rentier economy.
Year
2018
Language
English
Abstract
English
ISSN/ISBN
2308-6122
Volume
10
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