Contemporary Anti-Muslim Politics provides a succinct but potent critique of the policies of Western nations toward Muslims, particularly the aggressive foreign policies of the United States and the exclusionary domestic policies of Europe. These policies have already claimed millions of Muslim lives. For decades, policies that rely on war, exclusion, and ghettoization have triggered conflict escalation. The actions of groups such as the Islamic State and Boko Haram are reactions to this history. Their tactics exacerbate negative stereotyping of Muslims generally and Western military strategies cause many Muslims to pursue survivalist politics that enable and strengthen such groups. Anti-Muslim politics in Western nations takes many forms beyond war and exclusion, including racialization, stereotyping, sacrilegious cultural assaults, mass media scapegoating, and even tolerance, which implies something unpalatable in need of toleration. The gridlock brought by pluralism and constitutionalism, both in Europe and the United States, serves few people well, but it has locked Muslims into an especially abusive status quo.
Kenneth J. Long is professor of history and political science at the University of Saint Joseph.
Title: Contemporary Anti-Muslim Politics: Aggressions and Exclusions
Author: Long, Kenneth
ISBN: 9781498540353
Binding:
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication Date: 2018-11-06
Number of Pages: 170
Weight: 0.3131 kg
Kenneth Long provides a particularly timely and badly needed treatment of the sources and consequences of anti-Muslim attitudes and politics in contemporary times. His compact and yet wide-ranging and well-argued book focuses not on Islamophobia, but rather on what he convincingly shows is the 'enemy-ization' of Muslims more generally-those who are, are considered to be, or are thought to be Muslim. -- Michael Clancy, University of Hartford
Ken Long's new book is most timely. A thoughtful intervention in the debate about Islamophobia today, it offers poignant contrasts with the Anti-Semitism that swept across Europe under Nazism. Highlighting the pernicious role of stereotypes in prejudicial thinking, it should give us all pause about emerging threats to universalism, multiculturalism and liberal democracy. Reading this book fortifies us against the challenges that are emerging now. -- Sanford Schram, Hunter College
Thought-provoking and passionate, Long's book is a welcome contribution from the perspective of political science to the study of anti-Muslim rhetoric and policies in the United States and in Europe. -- Jonas Svensson, Linnaeus University