Query Result Set
SLIM21 Home
Advanced Search
My Info
Browse
Arrivals
Expected
Reference Items
Journal List
Proposals
Media List
Rules
ActiveUsers:594
Hits:20139806
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
Help
Topics
Tutorial
Advanced search
Hide Options
Sort Order
Natural
Author / Creator, Title
Title
Item Type, Author / Creator, Title
Item Type, Title
Subject, Item Type, Author / Creator, Title
Item Type, Subject, Author / Creator, Title
Publication Date, Title
Items / Page
5
10
15
20
Modern View
SECULARITY
(3)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
160379
Everyday ontologies and Islam for childless women in northwestern Turkey
/ Göknar, Merve
Göknar, Merve
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
This article discusses the significance of everyday Islam as a gendered locus for socialisation. Religious practices and conversations about religion comprise a major part of quotidian activities in the two villages in northwestern Turkey where the research took place. Men and women's everyday interaction with Islam dominated their ways of thinking, acting and especially socialising. Exploring the ways in which the Qur’an and the Hadith as discursive resources of Islam influence power relations and everyday practices, the article argues that Islamic morality co-exists with everyday Islam.
Key Words
Turkey
;
Gender
;
Secularity
;
Socialisation
;
Piety
;
Ontology
;
Islam
;
Infertility
Links
'Full Text'
In Basket
Export
2
ID:
060505
Political islam in Turkey: a state of controlled secularity
/ Tank, Punar
Mar 2005
Tank, Punar
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
Mar 2005.
Key Words
Military
;
Turkey
;
Political Islam
;
Secularity
In Basket
Export
3
ID:
180556
Secularity and Non-Religion in American Politics: a review essay
/ Smith, Mark Alan
SMITH, MARK ALAN
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
MARK ALAN SMITH reviews the recently published book Secular Surge: A New Fault Line in American Politics, by David E. Campbell, Geoffrey C. Layman, and John C. Green. Smith highlights the book’s value in distinguishing secularity from non-religion, along with the insights gained from the authors’ empirical analyses. Smith concludes that the conceptual framework in Secular Surge can usefully guide future research on religion and politics.
Key Words
Secularity
;
Non-Religion in American Politics
Links
'Full Text'
In Basket
Export