Digital Islam: Online Communities, Religious Authority, and Tech-Enabled Practice
MTA
How social media, apps, and streaming shape belief, scholarship, and activism in Muslim life
2nd Edition
Digital Islam examines how social media platforms, mobile apps, and streaming services have become central to contemporary Muslim belief, scholarship, and activism. It argues that these digital spaces are not neutral conduits but active environments that reshape religious authority, authenticity, and the moral economy of devotion. Through a series of case studies ranging from online fatwas and digital madrasas to influencer imams and halal fintech, the book shows how traditional institutions are being renegotiated by platform logics, algorithmic visibility, and new forms of credibility that blend scholarship with relatability and engagement metrics.
The work traces the transformation of key religious practices—such as the issuance of fatwas, the performance of prayer and Qur’an study, the organization of communal rituals, and the pursuit of religious education—into networked, on‑demand, and often monetized activities. It highlights tensions between tradition and innovation, the struggle to maintain authenticity amid meme‑dawah and micro‑sermons, and the ways in which gender, sectarian identity, and diaspora experiences are both amplified and contested online. The book also scrutinizes the ethical dimensions of attention, harassment, surveillance, and the commercialization of faith, showing how platform design, content moderation, and state power shape what counts as legitimate religious expression.
Ultimately, Digital Islam offers a critical yet hopeful map of the networked ummah, emphasizing the need for digital literacy, stewardship, and critical hope among religious leaders, creators, scholars, and everyday Muslims. It calls for a balanced approach that leverages the democratizing potential of digital tools while guarding against misinformation, extractive monetization, and the erosion of spiritual depth, urging communities to align their digital habits with enduring commitments to knowledge, justice, and compassion.
This book is written for three overlapping audiences: religious leaders seeking to navigate credibility and care in an attention economy, digital strategists looking for a nuanced understanding of faith communities beyond mere metrics, and researchers of religion and media who want a comparative map of debates, methods, and emerging fieldsites in digital Islam.
May 24, 2026
49,229 words
3 hours 27 minutes
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