REBUTTING NONSENSE ABOUT ISLAMOPHOBIA FROM INDIAN WRITER PLAYING TO THE GALLERY (original) (raw)
Related papers
When Donald Trump imposed the " Muslim ban " what was surprising was the absence of any pretense to make it political. It wasn't a ban against some countries, it was a ban against Muslim countries or pithily against Muslims. But then what happens when the fear of intrusion underlying " banning " finds its realization in lynching? In the existing discourse on Islamophobia, how do we understand not only the Muslim who isn't allowed to enter but also the Muslim who is quite simply killed for having entered ages ago. In this paper, I share the trajectory of Muslims in India through history, politics, and psychoanalytic theory to present the case of Islamophobia in India.
Islamophobia Studies in India: Problems and Prospects
Islamophobia Studies Journal, 2022
This article aims to situate the problems and prospects of thinking about critical Islamophobia studies in the context of India. In doing so, first, the article traces the technical and political impasses to the emergence of critical Islamophobia studies in India by looking at the problem of denial of Islamophobia with respect to Indian nationalism and at the same time the rise of a new security paradigm in the context of the global war on terror. A new approach on critical Islamophobia studies, which is cognizant towards the mass desire of Islamophobia, is introduced in order to understand its popular base in India. Secondly, the limitations of the framework of communalism in developing critical Islamophobia studies are analyzed in light of the biopolitical aspects of state and society in India. Finally, the article proposes a preliminary roadmap to a new approach to understand the politics of Islamophobia as an active desire based in practice in India and introduces a new typology of precautionary and proactionary Islamophobia in the context of rising Hindu nationalism by locating its normative and derivative dimensions.
Islamophobia: The Manufactured Illness of Sick Indian Hindutvavādins
Convergence to Praxis, Once in a Blue Moon Academia, 2023
License: CC BY 4.0; The aim of this paper is to highlight the political role that the construct of Islamophobia plays in the contemporary scenario of Indian politics under the crony governmentality of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its associate organizations under the Saṅgh Parivār, viz., how the very construct is presented or propagandized, how it finds manifestation in the public domain, how it relates to the grave socio-economic catastrophes that India is currently facing and so on. The paper also reaffirms the syncretic underpinnings of the geo-political formation of India by often alluding to historical studies, political events and cultural moorings. In doing so, it proposes a political strategy that far transcends the narrow electoral politics of regimented formations to conceive an outlook of resistance that repudiates the narratives of manufactured hate and exclusivist intolerance. Moreover, the authors of this agit-prop paper use “Islamophobia” as a process of displacement, a metaphor to depict the psychic traits of the Hindutvavādīns, who are indoctrinated by the Saṅgh Parivār with pseudo-narratives of mythical Hinduism. Keeping in mind the seminal work of Susan Sontag: Illness as Metaphor (1978), the authors are going to present a picture of contemporary Indian Politics, where the victims are suffering due to the dominant ideology of the Hindutvavādīns, who, in turn, are also suffering from a deep rooted disease, or rather, an anxiety disorder in the form of Islamophobia. The torch-bearers of Hindutvavāda consider the “other” (read Muslims) as cancerous elements of the Indian geo-politics, or as they say, “parasites” living off the nation’s wealth. This reciprocal naming of diseases is infesting both the contestants: victims and victimizers.
Islamophobia: defying the battle cry
The original, Dutch version of this 16000-words essay, was published on paper as part of the book Islam. Critical essays on a political religion [1]. Daniel Pipes, director of the Middle East Forum recommended it thus: “This book brings together essays from an outstanding group of authors to provide a wide-ranging analysis of Islam in public life. I know of no book comparable to it.” Unfortunately the book is only available in Dutch. This translated, updated and improved e-book version of the essay, provides a complete and definite answer to the challenges raised by the use of the duplicitous concept 'islamophobia'.
Islamophobia Studies Journal Fall 2014 Issue
Table of Contents Editorial Statement 7-12 Reconstructing the Muslim Self: Muhammad Iqbal, Khudi, and the Modern Self Hasan Azad 14-28 Reading Power: Muslims in the War on Terror Discourse Dr. Uzma Jamil 29-42 Disciplining the ‘Muslim Subject’: The Role of Security Agencies in Establishing Islamic Theology within the State’s Academia Dr. Farid Hafez 43-57 The Islamophobic-Neoliberal-Educational Complex Ahmed Kabel 58-75 “Ex-Muslims,” Bible Prophecy, and Islamophobia: Rhetoric and Reality in the Narratives of Walid Shoebat, Kamal Saleem, Ergun and Emir Caner Christopher Cameron Smith 76-93 The Politics of Arab and Muslim American Identity in a Time of Crisis: The 1986 House of Representatives Hearing on Ethnically Motivated Violence Against Arab-Americans Maxwell Leung 94-113 A Chronicle of A Disappearance Mapping the Figure of the Muslim in Berlin’s Verfassungsschutz Reports (2002-2009) Anna-Esther Younes 114-142 The Socio-political Context of Islamophobic Prejudices Denise Helly and Jonathan Dubé 143-156 The Islamophobia Industry, Hate, and Its Impact on Muslim Immigrants and OIC State Development Joseph Kaminski 157-176