“A searing study of West Africa that examines how new patterns of domestic economies, the promise of political liberalization, and the proliferation of new media have led to increased scrutiny of Islam in the public sphere.”
“Promises to make a major contribution not only to the study of women's involvement in 'political Islam' in West Africa, but also to comparative studies of commodification, mass entertainment, the global emergence of new religious cultures, masculinity, and the personal effects of neoliberalism.”
— Sean Hanretta, Stanford University
“Schulz’s book is a solid ethnographic work that makes a significant contribution to the
literature on Islam in Africa, and on the effects of media technologies on local peoples’ lives both on and beyond the continent.”
— Intl Jrnl African Historical Studies
“Muslims and New Media in West Africa makes a major contribution to the anthropological study of
Islam as well as the study of Islam in West Africa. It adds to our knowledge of everyday practices of Islam as well as how these ordinary practices play into the creation of religious authorities.”
— Journal of Relgion in Africa
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