Taming Muslim masculinity:patriarchy and Christianity in German immigrant integration
This article analyzes a growing sector of state-funded pedagogies designed to reform Muslim masculinity in Germany. These programs present Muslim men as suffering from a psychopathology rooted in an alleged Islamic “honor culture”. They rely on a mix of Christian and non-religious welfare providers to supply Muslim youth with alternative masculine role models. We trace three implications of this arrangement: First, these programs' culturalist approach perpetuates Orientalist hierarchizations of masculinity. Second, the de-Islamized masculinity these programs construct as normatively binding revolves around a heteronormative patriarchy imagined as benevolent, thereby reinforcing the subjection of women. Third, these educational initiatives yoke the reform of Muslim masculinity to male participants' dramatic conversion to a Christian-German culture that blurs the line between the religious and the nonreligious. We suggest that studies of (hegemonic) masculinity in Europe ought to attend to the salience of the nation-state and to the public relevance of Christianity—two dimensions given short shrift in recent theorizing.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Keywords | hegemonic masculinity,immigration,Europe,ethnography,religion,social work,youth,patriarchy,fatherhood |
| Departments | European Institute |
| DOI | 10.1177/1097184X241256606 |
| Date Deposited | 08 May 2024 09:09 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/122987 |
