乐鱼 体育

Liliya Karimova

Former Title VIII Research Scholar

Professional Affiliation

Professorial Lecturer, Department of Organizational Sciences and Communication, the George Washington University

Expert Bio

Liliya Karimova recently received her Ph.D. in Communication from UMASS-Amherst. She is currently an independent researcher and a Professorial Lecturer in the Department of Organizational Sciences and Communication at the George Washington University, Washington, DC. She has published in Nova Religio: the Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions; The Journal of Intercultural Communication Research; Central Asian Survey; Central Asian Affairs, Anthropology and Archaeology of Eurasia. Her research focuses on women, identity, piety, Islam, space, and discourse in Tatarstan, Russia.

乐鱼 体育 Project

"By the Grace of God: Women, Islam, and Transformation in Tatarstan, Russia."

Project Summary

This book project uses Tatar women鈥檚 stories about their paths to Islam as a window into Tatars鈥 Muslim revival, their diverse understandings of religion, and personal and social implications of Muslim piety in Russia today. The original ethnographic manuscript provides an intimate view of the Muslim revival at the individual level, explaining the importance of religion as a source of personal and social transformation. The focus on women鈥攊nformal yet often primary advocates of Islam in Tatarstan鈥攐ffers a unique outlook on the women鈥檚 experiences and perspectives, which are not represented by Muslim or government officials and unknown to the policy-making community.

Major Publications

Karimova, Liliya. "Muslim Revival in Tatarstan." Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions 17, no. 1 (2013): 38-58.
Karimova, Liliya. "鈥淧iety Stories鈥: Muslim Tatar Women鈥檚 Identity Performance, Negotiation, and Transformation through Storytelling." Journal of Intercultural Communication Research 43, no. 4 (2014): 327-345.
(Re)constructing Muslim Identities from the Soviet Past: Muslim Tatar Women鈥檚 Stories of Soviet Moral Selves. Central Asian Affairs. (accepted for publication, forthcoming 2016).