#Halal Culture on Instagram
Yelena Mejova, Youcef Benkhedda, Khairani

TL;DR
This study explores the diverse cultural expressions of halal on Instagram across different languages, revealing how its commercial use and social engagement vary among global Muslim populations.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of halal representations on Instagram in Arabic, English, and Indonesian, highlighting commercialization and shifts in social engagement.
Findings
Halal is used differently across languages, emphasizing food, animal trade, and cosmetics.
Commercialization signals a departure from traditional religious roots.
Posts with religious terms and food attract more engagement in English and Indonesian.
Abstract
Halal is a notion that applies to both objects and actions, and means permissible according to Islamic law. It may be most often associated with food and the rules of selecting, slaughtering, and cooking animals. In the globalized world, halal can be found in street corners of New York and beauty shops of Manila. In this study, we explore the cultural diversity of the concept, as revealed through social media, and specifically the way it is expressed by different populations around the world, and how it relates to their perception of (i) religious and (ii) governmental authority, and (iii) personal health. Here, we analyze two Instagram datasets, using Halal in Arabic (325,665 posts) and in English (1,004,445 posts), which provide a global view of major Muslim populations around the world. We find a great variety in the use of halal within Arabic, English, and Indonesian-speaking…
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