This comparative ethnography of a Muslim and a Christian
Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon focuses on contrasting social
belonging processes through a ritualization approach. Leonardo
Schiocchet argues that contrasts emerge out of the
intersectionality of religiosity, nationhood, refugeeness and
politics, and synthesizes academic research on piety and moral
self-cultivation and on the everyday life of religious communities.
He contributes to the literature on refugees at large, and
Palestinian refugees in particular, with the unique dense
socio-historical portrait of two refugee camps for which there is
almost no recorded literature.
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