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The late Saba Mahmood’s 2004 The Politics of Piety is a brilliant example of how to do philosophical ethnography. The book’s one flaw is its dense prose style, but even that may have been necessary in order to persuade its target audience: 2000s-era postmodern feminists, who tended to take six-syllable words as a sign of profundity. And while the typical vocabulary has changed significantly in the decades since she wrote it – from “resistance” and “agency” to “privilege” and “marginalization” – the kinds of views she is critiquing remain very widespread, and her critique has lost none of its power.

Mahmood is studying the da’wah piety movement among Egyptian Muslim women, including practices like wearing the veil. Other feminist scholars had studied such women before. But those scholars had insisted in defining their informants’ actions in the scholars’ terms rather than the informants’:

Some of these studies offer functionalist explanations, citing a variety of reasons why women take on the veil voluntarily (for example, the veil makes it easy for women to avoid sexual harassment on public transportation, lowers the cost of attire for working women, and so on). Other studies identify the veil as a symbol of resistance to the commodification of women’s bodies in the media, and more generally to the hegemony of Western values. While these studies have made important contributions, it is surprising that their authors have paid so little attention to Islamic virtues of female modesty or piety, especially given that many of the women who have taken up the veil frame their decision precisely in these terms. Instead, analysts often explain the motivations of veiled women in terms of standard models of sociological causality (such as social protest, economic necessity, anomie, or utilitarian strategy), while terms like morality, divinity, and virtue are accorded the status of the phantom imaginings of the hegemonized. (16)

A young Muslim woman praying in mosque with Qur’an (Adobe stock image).

As philosophers, at least, we could reasonably argue that women are wrong to wear the veil in the name of morality and divinity. But I agree with Mahmood that we do a disservice as anthropologists when we avoid portraying them as interested in morality and divinity, and instead portray them as engaged in acts of resistance – because resistance is something we’re more interested in.

We WEIRD people love to define everyone’s lives in terms of political power relationships – oppression, resistance, privilege. Postcolonialist scholars loved doing that in Mahmood’s day, and two decades later that paradigm has become accepted in the popular culture and throughout our institutions (as when the US National Public Radio describes diversity and racial equity as its internal “North Star”). What we rarely seem to do is consider whether this paradigm is shared by the people it’s supposed to help. It usually turns out that it isn’t – even in our own countries. (Most US Latinos think that illegal migration from Mexico is a major problem or even a crisis; unlike the white liberal Americans who support cutting police funding, black Americans want more police in their neighbourhoods.) They have other things to worry about, as Mahmood recognizes of her own informants:

it is important to point out that to analyze people’s actions in terms of realized or frustrated attempts at social transformation is necessarily to reduce the heterogeneity of life to the rather flat narrative of succumbing to or resisting relations of domination. Just as our own lives don’t fit neatly into such a paradigm, neither should we apply such a reduction to the lives of women like Nadia and Sana, or to movements of moral reform such as the one discussed here. (174)

In this light, compare Mahmood’s work to the far inferior work of Joseph Cheah. Like Mahmood, Cheah was interviewing a group typically considered marginalized: poor Burmese immigrants to California. Also like her, he finds that they do not think of their lives in terms of marginalization and resistance. But where Mahmood takes this as a reason to probe deeper and explore the ways in which they do understand their lives, Cheah takes it as an occasion to tell them they’re wrong! He confidently proclaims that his informants’ view is “the neoconservative stereotype of Asian Americans as the model minority”, “none other than internalization of the prevailing ideology of white supremacy”. We hear more about Cheah’s own self-righteous judgements of the immigrants than we hear of the immigrants’ own voices themselves. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a better example of how not to do anthropology.

Mahmood, by contrast, shows a genuine curiosity toward her informants, letting them speak with an independent voice. She admits there was a “repugnance that often swelled up inside me against the mosque movement, especially those that seemed to circumscribe women’s subordinate status within Egyptian society” – and yet, admirably, she took a deep breath and continued to listen further, recognizing that the women might yet have something to teach us:

Critique, I believe, is most powerful when it leaves open the possibility that we might also be remade in the process of engaging another’s worldview, that we might come to learn things that we did not already know before we undertook the engagement. This requires that we occasionally turn the critical gaze upon ourselves, to leave open the possibility that we may be remade through an encounter with the other. (16-17)

Mahmood, that is, rightly sees the appeal of the unappealing. I’ve argued for a long time that the philosophical ideas we learn the most from will seem repugnant to us at first, and we really learn by persevering. Mahmood works to makes the same move in ethnography: let us try to see others as they see themselves, even if we don’t like what we see, and maybe we will learn more about ourselves in the process.