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In the last decade a number of women-led mosques have emerged in Europe and North America. In The Making of a Mosque with Female Imams Jesper Petersen documents the serendipitous, yet predictable, emergence of the Mariam Mosque in Copenhagen. The study first demonstrates that individuals’ facing the unpredictable plays a decisive role in social processes. This leads to an investigation of how serendipities are erased when narratives are erected retrospectively in the form of commodified products, autobiographical narratives, and research. Furthermore, Petersen conceptualizes non-Muslims’ theological productions of Islam – Islam without the worship of Allah, so to speak – and demonstrates how this influences Muslim productions of Islam.
Jesper Petersen, PhD (2020) is a Danish historian of religion specialized in Islamic studies, and a postdoctoral researcher at the Producing Sharia in Context project at Copenhagen University.
AcknowledgementsList of figuresChapter 1: Entering the fieldChapter 2: Ethnographic methodologyChapter 3: Muslims in DenmarkChapter 4 Sherin KhankanChapter 5: The emergence of a religious demandChapter 6: The serendipitous spread of a storyChapter 7: Planning the founding of FemimamChapter 8: The serendipitous emergence of an institutionChapter 9: The pop-up mosque and its social media adhanChapter 10: The first Mariam MosqueChapter 11: Politicized and commodified narratives of Sherin KhankanConclusionBibliographyIndex