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This is a rich and comprehensive book that poses questions to contemporary studies on religion in general and Islam in particular. The ethnographic approach and focus on ordinary Muslims illustrated through informants practice and perceptions of the world presents Islam as a lived religion that must be understood in local contexts informed by global processes. The book shows how worldviews inform and are informed by practice, and is a valuable comment on how Islam and Muslims are being studied and perceived today; and it highlights the need to rethink methods and understandings found among some scholars as well as journalists. It further illustrates the need to study religion as, to a large extent, being created, understood, reformulated and practiced by ordinary people in connection to their daily life, disregarding what established religious scholars or acknowledged ideologues consider as being true religious belief or practice.Muslim Worldviews and Everyday Lives is not going to be the final word on Islam as a global civilization, but it provides the worthwhile service of introducing how anthropologists and others might conceive of Islam (and by extension other cultural systems) as more than local, or as local and global at the same time.This close look at Muslim worldviews argues for the importance of an overarching, universal worldview shared by Muslims in coexistence with local worldviews specific to particular societies, sects, and practices. Its cross-cultural approach makes it a wide-ranging and comprehensive work, while its ethnographic approach brings the importance of the local into salience. It is well written and readable and will be of interest to scholars of the Middle East and Islam, and religious and phenomenological studies, as well as serving as a useful introductory text to Muslim worldviews.This books approach is both novel and significant. El-Aswad rightly observes that Western scholarly and media attention to Islam represents it primarily alS6
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