Moskéer i Göteborg

Självpositionering i det urbana rummet

Authors

  • Helle Lykke Nielsen University of Southern Denmark
  • Maria Löfdahl Institute for language and folklore, Gothenburg
  • Tove Rosendahl University of Gothenburg
  • Johan Järlehed University of Gothenburg
  • Tommaso Milani University of Gothenburg

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59589/noso.22022.14683

Keywords:

mosques, positioning, names, languages, multilingualism

Abstract

This article examines how names and language choices are used to position mosques vis-à-vis other mosques and in relation to the majority population. Using Anthias’ positioning theory, Giraut and Houssay-Holzschuch’s theoretical framework for naming and naming processes, and the concept of spatial scaling, we analyze the names and language choices of three mosques in Gothenburg: Islamic Sunni Centre, also known as Bellevue Mosque, Gothenburg Mosque and Angered Mosque. The analysis shows that the mosques use a wide range of naming technologies, reflecting different ways of positioning themselves in Gothenburg’s mosque landscape. In this positioning, references from the country of origin, the choice of religious orientation and the use of Arabic as a religious language become tools both for the mosque and for the individuals who visit it.

Published

2022-06-01

How to Cite

Lykke Nielsen, H., Löfdahl, M., Rosendahl, T., Järlehed, J., & Milani, T. (2022). Moskéer i Göteborg: Självpositionering i det urbana rummet. Nordic Journal of Socio-Onomastics, 2, 105–142. https://doi.org/10.59589/noso.22022.14683

Issue

Section

Original articles