How Gelatin Becomes an Essential Symbol of Muslim Identity

Food Practice as a Lens into the Study of Religion and Migration

Authors

  • Rachel Brown Wilfred Laurier University Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/rsth.32558

Keywords:

migration, food and identity, Maghrebine, Muslim, context of reception, Paris, Montreal, practice

Abstract

Identity negotiation is an essential process in the immigrant experience and, since “we are what we eat,” food can play an important role in the creation, presentation and maintenance of these negotiated identities. In this article I argue that by choosing which religious/cultural food practices to continue and which ones to alter, by choosing to label them in particular ways or to relegate them to specific places and times, my informants show the vast and varied ways that Muslims negotiate their identities in two distinct contexts of reception (COR): Paris, France and Montreal, Canada. I also suggest that these contexts of reception have a significant impact on the way that immigrants live their religious lives in the host society and that food practice is one avenue to investigate these
effects. Consequently, through an ethnographic exploration of the experiences of Maghrebine Muslim immigrants in Paris and Montreal I contend that food can act as a lens into, and critique of, larger trends in the study of religion and migration.

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Published

2016-12-26

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Brown, R. (2016). How Gelatin Becomes an Essential Symbol of Muslim Identity: Food Practice as a Lens into the Study of Religion and Migration. Religious Studies and Theology, 35(2), 185-205. https://doi.org/10.1558/rsth.32558