Review
------
Honorable Mention for the 2005 Albert Hourani Book Award, Middle East Studies Association
Mahmood's book is a tour de force that provides an alternative prism through which we may understand the women's mosque
movement in Egypt.---Cynthia Nelson, Middle East Journal
Winner of the 2005 Victoria Schuck Award, American Political Science Association
"This very timely book opens doors into spaces of Islamic piety that shatter the stereotypes which dominate thinking in
the West. Mahmood carefully unpacks the distortions that common modes of liberalism and feminism impose on the Muslim
world. She combines richness of description with theoretical sophistication to provide in into the struggle of some
Muslim women to live their faith, often in the face of not only Western liberal influences but also Arab nationalism and
political Islamism. The reader is forced to face dilemmas that cannot be easily resolved. This is social science at its
most illuminating."--Charles Taylor, Board of Trustees Professor of Law and Philosophy, Northwestern University, author
of Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity
"My enthusiasm for this brave and stunning book is unqualified, and I learned something on every page. Politics of Piety
will reorient the way in which cultural theorists regard religious practice and the account of moral agency. It will be
of widespread interest not only to anthropologists of various persuasions but also to scholars of Middle East studies,
to moral philosophers, to religious studies scholars and lay readers, and to theorists of embodiment across the
disciplines."--Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature, University of California,
Berkeley, author of Bodies That Matter
"This brilliant study of women in the contemporary mosque movement in Egypt is a provocative challenge to secular
feminists and a testament to what anthropology can still offer--through its insistence on serious listening to other
worlds--to critical social theory. No feminist theorist or anthropologist of modernity will be able to think the same
way about liberalism, agency, or religion after reading this book. I hope that Mahmood's incisive analysis of the
Islamic movement will also finally put an end to the banalities that currently masquerade as knowledge about this
meaningful social movement."--Lila Abu-Lughod, Professor of Anthropology, Columbia University, author of Veiled
Sentiments: Honor and Poetry in a Bedouin Society
"Mahmood's keenly anticipated and very brave book is a brilliant contribution to the theoretical project for the
anthropological study of Islam and to our understanding of Islam in the Middle East, especially as it is practiced by
women. There is no question that it is highly significant for all kinds of reasons. The kind of data that the author
presents is fresh and relatively unknown in the literature."--Steve Caton, Professor of Contemporary Arab Studies and
Social Anthropology, Harvard University, author of Peaks of Yemen I Summon
From the Back Cover
-------------------
"This very timely book opens doors into spaces of Islamic piety that shatter the stereotypes which dominate thinking in
the West. Mahmood carefully unpacks the distortions that common modes of liberalism and feminism impose on the Muslim
world. She combines richness of description with theoretical sophistication to provide in into the struggle of some
Muslim women to live their faith, often in the face of not only Western liberal influences but also Arab nationalism and
political Islamism. The reader is forced to face dilemmas that cannot be easily resolved. This is social science at its
most illuminating."--Charles Taylor, Board of Trustees Professor of Law and Philosophy, Northwestern University, author
of Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity
"This brilliant study of women in the contemporary mosque movement in Egypt is a provocative challenge to secular
feminists and a testament to what anthropology can still offer--through its insistence on serious listening to other
worlds--to critical social theory. No feminist theorist or anthropologist of modernity will be able to think the same
way about liberalism, agency, or religion after reading this book. I hope that Mahmood's incisive analysis of the
Islamic movement will also finally put an end to the banalities that currently masquerade as knowledge about this
meaningful social movement."--Lila Abu-Lughod, Professor of Anthropology, Columbia University, author of Veiled
Sentiments: Honor and Poetry in a Bedouin Society
"My enthusiasm for this brave and stunning book is unqualified, and I learned something on every page. Politics of Piety
will reorient the way in which cultural theorists regard religious practice and the account of moral agency. It will be
of widespread interest not only to anthropologists of various persuasions but also to scholars of Middle East studies,
to moral philosophers, to religious studies scholars and lay readers, and to theorists of embodiment across the
disciplines."--Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor of Rhetoric and Comparative Literature, University of California,
Berkeley, author of Bodies That Matter
"Mahmood's keenly anticipated and very brave book is a brilliant contribution to the theoretical project for the
anthropological study of Islam and to our understanding of Islam in the Middle East, especially as it is practiced by
women. There is no question that it is highly significant for all kinds of reasons. The kind of data that the author
presents is fresh and relatively unknown in the literature."--Steve Caton, Professor of Contemporary Arab Studies and
Social Anthropology, Harvard University, author of Peaks of Yemen I Summon