Situated within cultural anthropology, this paper speaks to young Muslim women's aspirations of securing government jobs in Patna, India. Drawing on ethnographic research, I demonstrate how women reimagine aspirations as a form of pious practice, cultivating ethical subjectivity in holding kismat (divine will/predetermined future) and mehnat (human labor) in productive tension throughout their aspirational trajectories. Thinking of destiny as something to be made, women focus on hard work as pious labor bracketing conversations around destiny in their tayyari or preparation phase. When examination attempts prove unsuccessful, women distinguish kismat from badkismati (circumstantial ill-fortune), striving to imagine alternative futures that remain open and unknown. By centering aspiration as pious practice, I extend anthropological attention of everyday Islam into the domain of futurity, where futures are simultaneously open and predetermined.
Attached Paper
In-person November Annual Meeting 2026
Kismat and Mehnat: Ethical Aspirations of Muslim women in Patna, India
Papers Session: Futures: Critical Ethnographies of Time and Temporalities
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
Authors
