Organizing Muslim Virtue: Community Organizing, Comparative Religious Ethics, and the South African Muslim Struggle Against Apartheid

被引:2
|
作者
Houston, Sam [1 ]
机构
[1] Stetson Univ, Dept Religious Studies, Deland, FL 32723 USA
关键词
Islam; virtue ethics; comparative religious ethics; community organizing; South Africa; ANTHROPOLOGY; ETHNOGRAPHY; POLITICS; ART;
D O I
10.1111/jore.12426
中图分类号
B9 [宗教];
学科分类号
010107 ;
摘要
While offering valuable comparative insights into models of the self and ethical formation across religious traditions, studies of virtue ethics have been critiqued for putting forward accounts which are elite-focused. Some comparative ethicists have pointed to work in religious ethics and political theology on faith-based community organizing as offering compelling case studies of non-elite ethical formation. I seek to add to this literature by performing an analysis of the theories and practices of ethical formation in the South African Muslim anti-apartheid grassroots organization known as the "Call of Islam." The "Call of Islam" emphasized a liberation-oriented praxis and active solidarity with non-Muslim organizations for the purposes of protesting apartheid and employed a range of social practices including study circles (halaqat) and political funeral processions to prepare and equip its members for such work. As such, it not only sheds light on non-elite ethical formation, but in its cultivation of the habits and dispositions of democratic solidarity, it also serves as an Islamic example of broad-based community organizing.
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页码:143 / 169
页数:27
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