Lecture: Living Sectarianism: Lived Religion and Christian-Muslim Relations in Urban Egypt, with Hyun Jeong Ha (DKU)

Wednesday, November 15 | 8 AM, 9 PM BJT

Duke University

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Egypt today is more divided than ever along ethnic and religious lines. Social discrimination against Coptic Christians, for example, has increased since the regime transition after the 2011 Arab uprisings. What do daily inter-sectarian relations look like in Christians’ everyday lives? How do social class, gender, and geography shape discrimination based on religion differently? And what are the functions of religion beyond the church walls in the face of social discrimination? Drawing from ethnographic data collected in Cairo, Egypt between 2014 and 2018, this research suggests a novel approach of “living sectarianism” to the study of sectarianism in the Middle East and North Africa. The existing studies on this topic have largely focused on a structuralist analysis, such as historical changes in relations among the state, Islamist power, and the Church. While this is an important contribution to showing how sectarianism is constructed by major political and religious institutions, it leaves out the experiences of ordinary Egyptians. Combining the theoretical and methodological frameworks of lived religion and intersectionality, this approach reveals lesser-known aspects of the daily lives of Copts as religious minorities in Egypt. Lived religion teaches us how religion helps Christians define or reframe their discriminatory experiences, and the intersectionality of class, gender, and geography offers a more systematic and comprehensive understanding of sectarianism, without homogenizing Christians.

Sponsored by Duke Middle East Studies Center (DUMESC)