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Islam on Campus: Contested Identities and the Cultures of Higher Education in Britain

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsBook

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Islam on Campus: Contested Identities and the Cultures of Higher Education in Britain. / Scott-Baumann, Alison; Guest, Mathew ; Naguib, Shuruq et al.
Oxford University Press, 2020. 288 p.

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsBook

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APA

Vancouver

Scott-Baumann A, Guest M, Naguib S, Cheruvallil-Contractor S, Phoenix A. Islam on Campus: Contested Identities and the Cultures of Higher Education in Britain. Oxford University Press, 2020. 288 p.

Author

Scott-Baumann, Alison ; Guest, Mathew ; Naguib, Shuruq et al. / Islam on Campus : Contested Identities and the Cultures of Higher Education in Britain. Oxford University Press, 2020. 288 p.

Bibtex

@book{ec44062968554f0ab1a3d45a0ff20ec0,
title = "Islam on Campus: Contested Identities and the Cultures of Higher Education in Britain",
abstract = "Islam on Campus explores how Islam is represented, perceived, and lived within higher education in Britain. It considers the changing nature of university life, and the place of religion within it. Even while many universities maintain ambiguous or affirming orientations to religious institutions for reasons to do with history and ethos, much western scholarship has presumed higher education to be a strongly secularising force. This framing has resulted in religion often being marginalised or ignored as a cultural irrelevance by the university sector. However, recent times have seen higher education increasingly drawn into political discourses that problematize religion in general, and Islam in particular, as an object of risk.Using the largest data set yet collected in the UK, Islam on Campus explores university life and the ways in which ideas about Islam and Muslim identities are produced, experienced, perceived, appropriated, and objectified. The volume considers the role universities and Muslim higher education institutions play in the production, reinforcement, and contestation of emerging narratives about religious difference. This is a culturally nuanced treatment of universities as sites of knowledge production, and contexts for the negotiation of perspectives on culture and religion among an emerging generation. This collaborative study demonstrates the urgent need to release Islam from its official role as the othered, or the feared. When universities achieve this we will be able to help students of all affiliations and of none to be citizens of the campus in preparation for being citizens of the world.",
keywords = "Universities, Islam, ethical methodologies, Muslim, British Muslim Studies, Gender, Islamic Studies, Radicalization, Muslim colleges, Interreligious relationships, Prejudice",
author = "Alison Scott-Baumann and Mathew Guest and Shuruq Naguib and Sariya Cheruvallil-Contractor and Aisha Phoenix",
year = "2020",
month = oct,
day = "16",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780198846789",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Islam on Campus

T2 - Contested Identities and the Cultures of Higher Education in Britain

AU - Scott-Baumann, Alison

AU - Guest, Mathew

AU - Naguib, Shuruq

AU - Cheruvallil-Contractor, Sariya

AU - Phoenix, Aisha

PY - 2020/10/16

Y1 - 2020/10/16

N2 - Islam on Campus explores how Islam is represented, perceived, and lived within higher education in Britain. It considers the changing nature of university life, and the place of religion within it. Even while many universities maintain ambiguous or affirming orientations to religious institutions for reasons to do with history and ethos, much western scholarship has presumed higher education to be a strongly secularising force. This framing has resulted in religion often being marginalised or ignored as a cultural irrelevance by the university sector. However, recent times have seen higher education increasingly drawn into political discourses that problematize religion in general, and Islam in particular, as an object of risk.Using the largest data set yet collected in the UK, Islam on Campus explores university life and the ways in which ideas about Islam and Muslim identities are produced, experienced, perceived, appropriated, and objectified. The volume considers the role universities and Muslim higher education institutions play in the production, reinforcement, and contestation of emerging narratives about religious difference. This is a culturally nuanced treatment of universities as sites of knowledge production, and contexts for the negotiation of perspectives on culture and religion among an emerging generation. This collaborative study demonstrates the urgent need to release Islam from its official role as the othered, or the feared. When universities achieve this we will be able to help students of all affiliations and of none to be citizens of the campus in preparation for being citizens of the world.

AB - Islam on Campus explores how Islam is represented, perceived, and lived within higher education in Britain. It considers the changing nature of university life, and the place of religion within it. Even while many universities maintain ambiguous or affirming orientations to religious institutions for reasons to do with history and ethos, much western scholarship has presumed higher education to be a strongly secularising force. This framing has resulted in religion often being marginalised or ignored as a cultural irrelevance by the university sector. However, recent times have seen higher education increasingly drawn into political discourses that problematize religion in general, and Islam in particular, as an object of risk.Using the largest data set yet collected in the UK, Islam on Campus explores university life and the ways in which ideas about Islam and Muslim identities are produced, experienced, perceived, appropriated, and objectified. The volume considers the role universities and Muslim higher education institutions play in the production, reinforcement, and contestation of emerging narratives about religious difference. This is a culturally nuanced treatment of universities as sites of knowledge production, and contexts for the negotiation of perspectives on culture and religion among an emerging generation. This collaborative study demonstrates the urgent need to release Islam from its official role as the othered, or the feared. When universities achieve this we will be able to help students of all affiliations and of none to be citizens of the campus in preparation for being citizens of the world.

KW - Universities

KW - Islam

KW - ethical methodologies

KW - Muslim

KW - British Muslim Studies

KW - Gender

KW - Islamic Studies

KW - Radicalization

KW - Muslim colleges

KW - Interreligious relationships

KW - Prejudice

M3 - Book

SN - 9780198846789

BT - Islam on Campus

PB - Oxford University Press

ER -