Mohamad examines the day-to-day experience of virtual and non-tangible mobilities of young Bruneian Malay Muslim and Malaysians, as enabled by popular culture and digital media.
Cosmopolitanism has garnered interest from sociology, political studies, religious studies, geography, and education scholars. Despite this, there are three gaps in the study of Muslim cosmopolitanism. Firstly, young Muslims' cosmopolitanism in the digital age has not been intensively studied. Secondly, existing research overlooks Southeast Asia, especially Brunei Darussalam. Thirdly, the focus has not sufficiently engaged with popular culture and new media. This book addresses these gaps by exploring the everyday lives of Bruneian Malay Muslim and Malaysian youths, shaped by local, transcultural, and global practices. It expands the Muslim cosmopolitanism concept by examining the daily concerns, challenges, and practices these youths experience, offering new forms of mediated Muslim cosmopolitanism. Grounded in robust empirical data from two extensive research projects (2010-2024), this book employs diverse research approaches (ethnography and phenomenology) and methods (Qualitative Content Analysis and Interviews), ensuring reliable and in-depth findings.
Scholars in geography, sociology, religious studies, and youth studies will find this book invaluable for its insights into cosmopolitanism, popular culture, new media, digital youth, and contemporary Southeast Asia.
Table of Contents Preface 1. Introduction 2. Framing Mediated Muslim Cosmopolitanism 3. Exploring Mediated Muslim Cosmopolitanism: Analytical Tools and Youth Digital Engagements 4. Muslim Youths’ Cosmopolitan Sensibilities and Performance 5. Everyday Lived Islam, Religiosities, and Hijab Practices 6. Cosmopolitan Consciousness, Civic Imagination and Digital Activism in Brunei 7. Mediated Muslim Cosmopolitanism and Muslim Youth Culture 8. References
Siti Mazidah Mohamad is an assistant professor at the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASS) at Universiti Brunei Darussalam. She researched Muslim youth culture and engagements with popular culture and new media in Southeast Asia focusing on mobilities, everyday socio‑spatial affective engagements, practices, and realities of young people reflected through various new social media platforms. She has published in numerous prestigious academic journals.