School of Social and Political Sciences - Theses

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    Awkward engagements: the embodied experience of female converts to Islam
    TURNER, KAREN ( 2015)
    This thesis examines the phenomena of female conversion to Islam amongst a group of middle class Australian women. Conversion is conceived of as a deeply embodied project in which female converts create a pious and moral self by adhering to Islamic beliefs and practices. Through a detailed analysis of discussions at local mosque groups, I argue that conversion is an ‘awkward engagement’ between the converts desire for a new moral self and the practical conditions of their conversion, which work through, on and in their bodies. This thesis extends existing work on gender and religious conversion by drawing on theories of embodiment and practice, bringing it together with recent anthropological work on women’s participation in religious movements and Muslim piety. Theories of embodiment and practice, bridge the gap between lived experience, practice and discourse, and help complicate notions of the secular and religious, agency and submission.