Affiliation:
1. DePaul University, USA
Abstract
In this article, I explore how globalization discourses practices work together to form the identities of female Islamic bankers working in the first stand-alone women’s Islamic bank in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. An Islamic bank interacts with the individual by providing a discursive and physical space in which the subject can shape and respond to her desire to identify and engage with the debates in the global Muslim community about morality, practice and the role of Islam in everyday life. Global financial systems and local gender practices are embodied in these buildings in a kind of financial purdah: building spaces become both a marketing tool and a support for globally-based economic activity under the auspices of morality and tradition. Based upon fieldwork and interviews with Islamic bankers, I show how normative global financial practices and local moral gender practices work together for the advancement of both.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Cultural Studies,Social Psychology
Cited by
3 articles.
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