A groundbreaking anthropological analysis of Islam as experienced by Muslims, By Noon Prayer builds a conceptual model of Islam as a whole, while travelling along a comparative path of biblical, Egyptological, ethnographic, poetic, scriptural and visual materials. Grounded in long-term observation of Arabo-Islamic culture and society, the study captures the rhythm of Islam weaving through the lives of Muslim women and men.Examples of the rhythmic nature of Islam can be seen in all aspects of Muslims' everyday lives. Muslims break their Ramadan fast upon the sun setting, and they receive Ramadan by sighting the new moon. Prayer for their dead is by noon and burial is before sunset. This is space and time in Islam - moon, sun, dawn and sunset are all part of a unique and unified rhythm, interweaving the sacred and the ordinary, nature and culture in a pattern that is characteristically Islamic.Fadwa El Guindi is director and research anthropologist at El Nil Research in Los Angeles. She is currently Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the University of Qatar, Doha, Qatar.
Introduction * Part One: The Anthropology of Space and Time * Chapter One: Overview and Critique * Chapter Two: False Noses, True Calendars * Part Two: Space and Time in Arabo-Islamic Society and Culture * Chapter Three: Cosmic Beginnings * Chapter Four: The Notion of Rhythm * Chapter Five: Rhythms of Nature * Chapter Six: Rhythms of Culture * Part Three: Worldly Time, Nonworldy Space * Chapter Seven: The Five Pillars Reconsidered * Chapter Eight: Marking Time: Sacred Corporeality--Body and Community * Conclusion