Mind the Beard! Deference, Purity and Islamization of Everyday Life as Micro-factors in a Salafi Cultural Epidemiology

Authors

  • Jonas Svensson Linneaus University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cis.v8i1-2.185

Keywords:

Cultural epidemiology, deference, contagion, cognitive dissonance theory

Abstract

Salafism has come to the fore of research on Islam, only recently. Some have even termed it a ‘new religious movement’. Faced with what appears to be a growing popularity of Salafism, researchers have made attempts at explaining the basic factors in this development. Most explanations have related to the popularity in particular social settings, and hence have mainly focused contextual factors of a political, social or economic character. From a theoretical perspective of a “cultural epidemiology”, the article suggests that complementary to factors on a macro- or meso-level, there are certain micro-factors related to general human psychological, cognitive and emotional dispositions that, at least hypothetically, are of interest to the main question: why is Salafism successful, and in so diverse contexts?

Author Biography

  • Jonas Svensson, Linneaus University
    Jonas Svensson is an associate professor in the study of religions. He has previously published in the fields of Muslim feminism, Islam and human rights, contemporary Muslim discourses on HIV/AIDS and diverse Muslim perception of the Qur'an.

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Published

2014-07-08

Issue

Section

Special Issue: Articles

How to Cite

Svensson, J. (2014). Mind the Beard! Deference, Purity and Islamization of Everyday Life as Micro-factors in a Salafi Cultural Epidemiology. Comparative Islamic Studies, 8(1-2), 185-210. https://doi.org/10.1558/cis.v8i1-2.185