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Islamic Rituals Beyond the Mosque
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Islamic rituals are often assumed to be inextricably bound to corporeal enactments and spatial constraints. This study offers a reassessment of the historical evolution of ritual performance, illum...
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31 December 2026
Prevailing assumptions posit that Islamic rituals are inextricably bound to corporeal enactments and spatial constraints. This study, however, critically interrogates such presuppositions, challenging the notion that ritual praxis necessitates physical embodiment. A common misconception is that the conceptualization of Islamic rituals divorced from spatiality and physicality is a contemporary phenomenon, catalysed by the exigencies of the Covid-19 pandemic or formulated by modern Muslim intellectuals. This research, however, dismantles this anachronistic view by tracing the origins of such conceptualizations to the 9th century, wherein early Muslim jurists theorized non-physical ritual practices such as the “Heart Prayer” and the “Ship Prayer.”
Grounded in rigorous legal and philosophical analysis, this study offers a comprehensive reassessment of the historical evolution of ritual performance, illuminating its fluidity rather than its presumed immutability. The investigation extends beyond theoretical inquiry to examine the broader ramifications of cyber-Islamic rituals, interrogating their implications for religious authority, the construction of authenticity, and communal identity formation. Through empirically substantiated case studies of Sunni and Sufi communities in both Egypt and the United States, this work situates contemporary digital ritual practices within a historically and legally nuanced framework, thus making a substantive contribution to scholarly discourse on the transformation of Islamic rituality.
Grounded in rigorous legal and philosophical analysis, this study offers a comprehensive reassessment of the historical evolution of ritual performance, illuminating its fluidity rather than its presumed immutability. The investigation extends beyond theoretical inquiry to examine the broader ramifications of cyber-Islamic rituals, interrogating their implications for religious authority, the construction of authenticity, and communal identity formation. Through empirically substantiated case studies of Sunni and Sufi communities in both Egypt and the United States, this work situates contemporary digital ritual practices within a historically and legally nuanced framework, thus making a substantive contribution to scholarly discourse on the transformation of Islamic rituality.
Price: £90.00
Pages: 200
Publisher: Gerlach Press
Imprint: Gerlach Press
Series: Islamic Studies
Publication Date:
31 December 2026
ISBN: 9783959942010
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Islamic Studies, Worship, rites, ceremonies and rituals, Islamic life and practice, Religious life and practice
Dr Wael Hegazy is Arabic Language Lecturer at the Religious Studies Department of University of California, Santa Barbara. His research has a special focus on Digital Islam, virtual Ummah, and Online Muslim communities in the US.