S. Sayyid Thinking Through Islamophobia* S. Sayyid, "Out of the Devil 's Dictionary" * Jonathan Riley-Smith, "Islamophobia and the Crusades"* Ab-doolKarim Vakil, "Is the Islam in Islamophobia the Same as the Islam in Anti-Islam: Or, When is it Islamophobia Time?"* Katherine Butler Brown, "The Problem With Parables" * Chris Allen Islamophobia: from K.I.S.S. to R.I.P. * Yakoub Islam, "The Voyage In: Second Life Islamophobia" * Nasar Meer and Tariq Modood, "The Racialization of Muslims"* Muhammad G. Khan, "'No Innocents'" * David Tyrer, "'Flooding the embankments': Race, biopolitics and sovereignty"* Adi Kuntsman, Jin Haritaworn, and Jennifer Petzen "Sexualising the 'War on Terror'" * Yahya Birt "Governing Muslims after 9/11" * Cemalettin Hasimi, "Neoconservative narrative as globalizing Islamophobia"* Samia Bano, "Asking the Law Questions: Agency and Muslim Women"* Annelies Moors, "Fear of Small Numbers? Debating face-veiling in the Netherlands"* Madina Tlostanova, "A Short History of Russian Islamophobia" * Lin Yi Culturalism, "Education and Islamophobia in China"* Yasin Aktay "Islamophobia in Turkey"* Mohammad Siddique Seddon, "Reclaiming The Turk's Head"* Rodhanthi Tzanelli, "Islamophobia and Hellenophilia: Greek Myths of Post-Colonial Europe"* Duncan McCargo, "Troubled by Muslims: Thailand's Declining Tolerance?"* Nadia Fadil, "'Breaking the Taboo of Multiculturalism': The Belgian Left and Islam"* Katy Pal Sian, "'Don't Freak, I'm a Sikh!'" * Peter Millward, "Islamophobia: A new racism in football?" * Ruvani Ranasinha, "Fundamental Fictions: Gender, Power and Islam in BrAsian Diasporic Formations"* Dibyesh Anand, "Generating Islamophobia in India"* AbdoolKarim Vakil, "Who's Afraid of Islamophobia?"
An excellent and wide ranging exploration of how the term Islamophobia has been applied in academic discourses and general representations of Muslims throughout the world. This thought provoking anthology contributes significantly to our understanding of a much used and abused concept. -- Ziauddin Sardar, author of Desperately Seeking Paradise and Balti Britain Thinking Through Islamophobia is a rare endeavor of collective scholarship that is timely, prescient, and seminal. Challenging us to develop critical Muslim studies in post-western epistemologies, it provides exemplary analyses of the imbricated formations of racism, Orientalism, secularism, and postcolonialism largely silenced by contemporary social and political theory. -- Barnor Hesse, Northwestern University Islamophobia has become a dominant form of racist expression across the contemporary global north. Thinking Through Islamophobia provides an especially welcome, timely, and varied set of accounts about what the phenomenon covers, why the current upsurge, and how effectively to think about it. -- David Theo Goldberg, author of The Threat of Race: Reflections on Racial Neoliberalism
S. Sayyid is reader in rhetoric and director of the Centre of Ethnicity and Racism Studies at the University of Leeds. He is the author of A Fundamental Fear and coeditor of A Postcolonial People.AbdoolKarim Vakil is lecturer in the departments of History, Spanish, and Portuguese and Brazilian Studies at King's College, London.
Ask a Question About this Product More... |