Two people praying in a Mosque

Doctoral project: Concurrent Muslim Orthodoxies – Transnationalism and religious diversity in a Swedish city

The project studies the significance of ethnic and denominational diversity among Swedish Muslims.

Project information

Doctoral student
Gustav Larsson
Supervisor
Jonas Svensson
Assistant supervisor
Kristina Gustafsson
Participating organizations
Linnaeus University
Timetable
1 Sep 2018 – 1 Sep 2023
Subject
The study of Religion (Department of Cultural Sciences, Faculty of Arts and Humanities)

More about the project

The project concerns cultural encounters and Muslim identity formation in a multicultural Swedish context. Ethnographic methods are used to analyse social interaction within urban spaces that have been greatly affected by international migration. As a result, these spaces are often shared by cultural communities linked to many different parts of the world. This fact that highlight questions about how social interaction with these environments affect how religious identities are expressed and understood by local inhabitants. Basic terms for religious self-designation (e.g., ‘Muslim’) are often shared across cultural boundaries, yet are also defined and expressed differently, depending on broader notions of ethnic and denominational identity.

In relation to these dynamics, the project will explore how Swedish Muslims negotiate ethnic or denominational differences and formulate new forms of religious identity as a result—either as a way of accommodating difference, or as way of marking exclusion. Simultaneously, the project will also try to situate these negotiative practices within the broader, historical context of contemporary Swedish society, while also exploring how transnational developments affect local communities.

----------

The project is part of:
Linnaeus University Centre for Concurrences in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies
Cluster for Migration, Citizenship and Belonging