Aaron Rock-Singer is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin—Madison and author of Practicing Islam in Egypt: Print Media and Islamic Revival.
""In the Shade of the Sunna [is] an indispensable reference for those interested in Salafism or Islam and, more broadly, for those intent on exploring the complicated but nevertheless constitutive entanglements between religious tradition and modernity."" * Journal of the American Academy of Religion * ""Rock-Singer has done the field a great service by publishing this book.... Theoretically robust, empirically rich...[this is an] excellent book that advances our knowledge of Salafism both in Egypt and generally."" * Die Welt des Islams * ""In this innovative new analysis of Salafism, Aaron Rock-Singer takes as his point of departure a series of publicly visible markers that are understood by Salafis and non- Salafis alike to differentiate the former from the latter. . . .This volume helpfully turns the study of Islamic reform toward the social – the everyday Salafi practices which are not profane even if they are mundane, but rather reflect a conception of Islam in which the concerns of religion move into new social domains."" * Islamic Law and Society * ""This text is an erudite, novel examination of the social history of Salafism and its project to fashion a distinct visual Salafi identity through a reconstruction of early Islamic history. It will be of interest to specialists and lay people interested in Islam and the Middle East and makes a valuable contribution to the field of Salafism studies."" * The New Arab * ""Aaron Rock-Singer’s In the Shade of the Sunna: Salafi Piety in the Twentieth-Century Middle East is a signal contribution to the study of modern salafism qua movement as embedded in larger societies, with special reference to twentieth-century Egypt and to a lesser extent Saudi Arabia"" * Bustan: The Middle East Book Review * ""The book’s importance…lies in a dual shifting from the prevailing scholarship on Salafism: from ideology, law, and political participation to social practices; and from jihadist radicalism to social reform."" * The Journal of Middle East and Africa *