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Arabs and Muslims in the Media After 9/11: Representational Strategies for a “Postrace” Era
Arabs and Muslims in the Media after 9/11: Representational Strategies for a “Postrace” Era Evelyn Alsultany American Quarterly, Volume 65, Number 1, March 2013, pp. 161-169 (Article) Published by The Johns Hopkins University Press DOI: 10.1353/aq.2013.0008 For additional information about this article http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/aq/summary/v065/65.1.alsultany.html Access provided by University of Michigan @ Ann Arbor (21 Oct 2013 10:05 GMT) Arabs, Muslims, and “Post-race” Representations after 9/11 | 161 Arabs and Muslims in the Media after 9/11: Representational Strategies for a “Postrace” Era Evelyn Alsultany fter 9/11 a strange thing happened: there was an increase in sym- pathetic portrayals of Arabs and Muslims on US television. If a TV Adrama or Hollywood film represented an Arab or Muslim as a terror- ist, then the story line usually included a “positive” representation of an Arab or Muslim to offset the negative depiction. Dozens of TV dramas portrayed Arab and Muslim Americans as the unjust target of hate crimes or as patriotic US citizens. President George W. Bush was sure to distinguish between Arab and Muslim “friends” and “enemies,” stating “the enemy of America is not our many Muslim friends; it is not our many Arab friends. Our enemy is a radical network of terrorists, and every government that supports them.”1 News reporters interviewed Arab and Muslim Americans, seemingly eager to include their perspectives on the terrorist attacks, careful to point out their experiences with hate crimes. Yet at the same time that sympathetic portrayals of Arab and Muslim Americans proliferated on US commercial television in the weeks, months, and years after 9/11, hate crimes, workplace discrimination, bias incidents, and airline discrimination targeting Arab and Muslim Americans increased exponentially. -
Transnational Media Events
TRANSNATIONAL MEDIATRANSNATIONAL EVENTS In September 2005, a newspaper in Denmark published 12 cartoons depicting Mohammed, the holy Prophet of Islam. Soon after publication, these pictures became part of various events, political projects and diplomatic action. All over the world, the cartoons – or interpretations of them – were connected to dis- cursive struggles that pre-existed their drawing and publication. The cartoon event thus extended well beyond its immediate dramatic phase of spring 2006, both into the past and the future, and became at least a small landmark case of post-9/11 global media history. TRANSNATIONAL MEDIA EVENTS In this book, a community of international media researchers collects some of the lessons learned and questions provoked and offered by media coverage of The MOHAMMED CARTOONS and the the Mohammed cartoons in 16 countries, ranging from Denmark, Egypt and Argentina to Pakistan and Canada. The book looks at the coverage of the car- IMAGINED CLASH of CIVILIZATIONS toons and related incidents through a number of conceptual lenses: political spin, free speech theory, communication rights, the role of visuals and images in global communication, Orientalism and its counter-discourses, media’s rela- tions to immigration policy, and issues of integration. Through this approach, the book aims at a nuanced understanding of the cartoon controversy itself as well as at more general insights into the role of the media in contemporary transnational and transcultural relations. Elisabeth Eide, Risto Kunelius & Angela Phillips -
— Upcoming Events —
MONTH IN REVIEW so they set up a Republic to protect individual liberties from the passions of the majority at the moment. They worried about the “Jehoshaphat king of Judah returned to his home in Jerusalem excesses of democracy. in peace. Then Jehu son of Hanani the seer went out to confront “James Madison, the primary Framer of the U.S. Constitu- him and said to King Jehoshaphat, ‘Do you help the wicked and tion, noted: ‘Democracies have been spectacles of turbulence and love those who hate the LORD? Because of this, the LORD’s conflict.’ His views were shared by the other Founders. That is wrath is on you. However, some good is found in you, for you why the U.S. Constitution was designed to restrict a democratic have removed the Asherah poles from the land and have decided majority from limiting freedom of speech, press, religion and so to seek God.’ forth. “Jehoshaphat lived in Jerusalem, and once again he went out “The Constitution is a document of liberty, not of democ- among the people from Beer-sheba to the hill country of Ephraim racy. and brought them back to the LORD God of their ancestors. He “The Bush administration has placed itself in a difficult po- appointed judges in all the fortified cities of the land of Judah, sition by advocating democracy rather than liberty as its global city by city. Then he said to the judges, ‘Consider what you are mission. The democratic elections in Iraq and Palestine may well doing, for you do not judge for man, but for the LORD, who is result in subjugation of women, containment of basic freedoms of with you in the matter of judgment. -
Quran-The Linguistic Miracle
1 QUR’AN - the LINGUISTIC MIRACLE BOOK Contents Section 1: The Arabic Language Chapter 1: Introduction to the Arabic Language (Why it’s Unique): .............................................. 4 Chapter 2: Etymology of Arabic (Base Letters & their meanings) ................................................. 7 Chapter 3: Grammar vs Phonetic Languages, and Arabic (Letter Sounds & Shapes): ................. 15 Chapter 4: Richness of 3 Letter Arabic Vocabulary (Rich Meanings): .......................................... 28 Chapter 5: Words longer than 3 Root Letters (Fusing words) ...................................................... 35 Chapter 6: Synonyms and Antonyms: (Words are known by their ‘Relatives’) ........................... 38 Chapter 7 - Classical Arabic Poetry: .............................................................................................. 41 The Generous man & the Mu’allaqah of ‘Amr bin Kulthum ......................................................... 41 Palindromes (spelling something the same in reverse): .................................................. 44 Chapter 8: Balaaghah & Eloquence (Subtle meanings) ............................................................... 45 Past tense (maaDiy) vs Present-Future tense (muDaari’): ............................................... 45 Noun (constant) vs Verb (temporary):.............................................................................. 46 Female Plural used for non-Female objects = ‘Handful’ (less than 10) ............................ 47 Chapter 9: What -
American Muslims: the Community and Their Relations with Jews
Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs www.jcpa.org by Noam Ivri Published January 2011 The opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of the Board of Fellows of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs No. 64, 16 January 2011 / 11 Shevat 5771 American Muslims: The Community and Their Relations with Jews Noam Ivri Muslims in the United States number slightly under three million according to the most accurate population studies. They are among the wealthiest, most educated, and most ethnically diverse Muslim communities in the world. Their integration into the United States is remarkably different than in European countries, most notably in the near- absence of Muslim ghettos or enclaves common across the Atlantic. Three well- organized and well-funded political and civil rights organizations form the core Muslim advocacy.They work within the American political process to advance Muslim interests, but frequently present their community as victims of widespread "Islamophobia."Leaders in all three have drawn controversy for support of extremist groups, and are overall hostile to Israel. Since 9/11 several counterestablishment groups, often led by a charismatic individual, have been formed to promote alternative visions for American Muslims. Strongly influenced by their adopted homeland, they perceive the character and policies of United States more favorably and advocate for a moderate Islam in harmony with democratic, pluralistic values. Nevertheless, their influence among the broader Muslim community is still quite limited. Similar social currents have emerged in the openness of American society, questioning taboo issues such as homosexuality and apostasy, and spurring American Muslims into the spotlight of global Islamic debates. -
The Rightly Guided Caliphs and the Umayyads
NATIONAL OPEN UNIVERSITY OF NIGERIA SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SOCIAL SCIENCES COURSE CODE: ISL 271 COURSE TITLE: THE RIGHTLY GUIDED CALIPHS AND THE UMAYYADS. ISL127 COURSE GUIDE COURSE GUIDE ISL271 THE RIGHTLY GUIDED CALIPHS AND THE UMAYYADS Course Team Muhibbudin G. Yusuf (Developer/Writer) - EACOED, OYO Prof. A.F. Ahmed (Editor/Programme Leader) - NOUN Dr A.R. Mustapha (Coordinator) - NOUN ii ISL127 COURSE GUIDE NATIONAL OPEN UNIVERSITY OF NIGERIA National Open University of Nigeria Headquarters 14/16 Ahmadu Bello Way Victoria Island Lagos. Abuja Office 5, Dar’es Salaam Street Off Aminu Kano Crescent Wuse II, Abuja Nigeria e-mail: [email protected] URL: www.nou.edu.ng Published By: National Open University of Nigeria First Printed 2012 ISBN: 978-058-635-0 All Rights Reserved iii ISL127 COURSE GUIDE CONTENTS PAGE Introduction ……………………………………………………...…. 1 What You Will Learn in This Course ………………………….…... 1 Course Aims …………………………………………………….…. 1 Course Objectives………………………………………………..…. 2 Working through the Course…………………………………….…. 2 Study Units……………………………………………….………… 2 Textbooks and References ………………………………………… 3 Assignment File………………………………………………..…… 4 Course Overview and Presentation schedule………………….…… 4 Assignment……………………………………………….……….… 5 Tutor-Marked Assignment …………………………………….…... 5 Final Examination and Grading………………………………….…. 6 Course Marking Scheme………………………………………….… 6 How to Get the Most from This Course………………………….…. 6 Facilitators/Tutor and Tutorials………………………………….…. 8 Summary……………………………………………….…………… 8 iv Introduction Welcome! ISL127: The Rightly Guided Caliphs and the Umayyads is a two-unit course available in the second semester for the B.A. Islamic Studies programme at the National Open University of Nigeria. This course aims at exposing you to the history of the four Orthodox Caliphs. The course places particular emphasis on their biographies and contributions to the development of Islam. -
AHA 2010 Freedom of Expression and the Rights of Women
www.theAHAfoundation.org FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION AND THE RIGHTS OF WOMEN Political Islam’s threat to freedom of expression is bad for everyone, but hurts women the most December 2, 2010 Published by the AHA Foundation The AHA Foundation 130 7th Avenue, Suite 236, New York, NY 10011 [email protected] Table of Contents Executive Summary & Recommendations 3 Introduction: The Price of Freedom of Expression 6 Section 1: The Importance of Freedom of Expression for the Rights of 7 Muslim Women in Western Countries Section 2: Political Islam and Multiple Levels of Pressure against Freedom 10 of Expression 1) Global Political Pressure 12 2) Lawsuits and Legal Tactics Pressuring Individuals—the Fight in the 25 Courts 3) Pressure through Physical Threats to Individuals 31 4) Internal Pressures: U.S. Institutions, Fear, and Self-Censorship 39 Section 3: The Effects of a Climate of Domination 48 Conclusion: A More Effective Response in the United States and Other 52 Western Countries References 55 2 Executive Summary Supporters of political Islam have launched a multifaceted assault on the principles of freedom in the West. Political Islam includes the establishment of Sharia (the body of Islamic religious law), which contains harsh restrictions on freedom of expression, as well as harsh punishments for apostasy and blasphemy and standards at odds with modern Western norms of gender equality. Political Islamists are actively attempting to extend the reach of Sharia over Western cultures and legal systems. This report addresses how, through means of actual physical violence, threats and intimidation, legal action, and political pressure, the emancipation of Muslim women is stunted if not ground to a halt. -
Parolin V9 1..190
Citizenship in the Arab World IMISCOE International Migration, Integration and Social Cohesion in Europe The IMISCOE Network of Excellence unites over 500 researchers from European institutes specialising in studies of international migration, integration and social cohesion. The Network is funded by the Sixth Framework Programme of the European Commission on Research, Citizens and Governance in a Knowledge-Based Society. Since its foundation in 2004, IMISCOE has developed an integrated, multidisciplinary and globally comparative research project led by scholars from all branches of the economic and social sciences, the humanities and law. The Network both furthers existing studies and pioneers new research in migration as a discipline. Priority is also given to promoting innovative lines of inquiry key to European policymaking and governance. The IMISCOE-Amsterdam University Press Series was created to make the Network’s findings and results available to researchers, policymakers and practitioners, the media and other interested stakeholders. High-quality manuscripts authored by IMISCOE members and cooperating partners are published in one of four distinct series. IMISCOE Research advances sound empirical and theoretical scholarship addressing themes within IMISCOE’s mandated fields of study. IMISCOE Reports disseminates Network papers and presentations of a time-sensitive nature in book form. IMISCOE Dissertations presents select PhD monographs written by IMISCOE doctoral candidates. IMISCOE Textbooks produces manuals, handbooks and other didactic tools for instructors and students of migration studies. IMISCOE Policy Briefs and more information on the Network can be found at www.imiscoe.org. Citizenship in the Arab World Kin, Religion and Nation-State Gianluca P. Parolin IMISCOE Research This work builds on five years of onsite research into citizenship in the Arab world. -
Omar Al-Mukhtar the Libyan Battle for the Heritage of Omar Al-Mukhtar, the “Lion of the Desert” by Andrew Mcgregor
VOLUME IX, ISSUE 10 u MARCH 10, 2011 IN THIS ISSUE: BRIEFS..................................................................................................................................1 AL-QAEDA IN THE ARABIAN PENINSULA AND THE PROTESTS IN YEMEN By Erik Stier..............................................................................................................3 THE CASE OF THE IRANIAN WARSHIPS AND THE SUEZ CANAL By Nima Adelkhah.......................................................................................................5 Omar al-Mukhtar THE LIBYAN BATTLE FOR THE HERITAGE OF OMAR AL-MUKHTar, the “lion of THE DESERt” By Andrew McGregor...............................................................................................7 Terrorism Monitor is a publication of The Jamestown Foundation. The Terrorism Monitor is designed to be read by policy- makers and other specialists yet be accessible to the general LIBYAN LOYALISTS AND DISSIDENTS VIE FOR TUAREG FIGHTERS public. The opinions expressed within are solely those of the With the fate of Libya in the balance, both sides in the struggle to determine its authors and do not necessarily future are appealing to North Africa’s indigenous Tuareg warriors for military reflect those of The Jamestown Foundation. help. Libya’s own Tuareg population of roughly 50,000 has been simultaneously courted and deprived of its cultural and ethnic heritage by the Qaddafi government. The regime classes the non-Semitic Berber Tuareg as a branch of Unauthorized reproduction or the Arab nation -
"Legal Jihad": How Islamist Lawfare Tactics Are Targeting Free Speech
"LEGAL JIHAD": HOW ISLAMIST LAWFARE TACTICS ARE TARGETING FREE SPEECH Brooke Goldstein andAaron Eitan Meyer* I. WELCOME TO LAWFARE .............................. 395 II. THE ISLAMIST MOVEMENT ............................. 396 III. LEGAL JIHAD ....................................... 397 IV. LAWFARE IN EUROPE & CANADA ....................... 400 V. ENGLAND .......................................... 402 V I. CANADA ........................................... 404 VII. THE NETHERLANDS .................................. 405 VEII. THE INTERNATIONAL SCENE ........................... 407 IX. CONCLUSION ....................................... 409 I. WELCOME TO LAWFARE Lawfare is usually defined as the use of the law as a weapon of war' or the pursuit of strategic aims through aggressive legal maneuvers.2 Traditionally, lawfare tactics have been used to obtain moral advantages over the enemy in the court of public opinion3 and to intimidate heads of state from acting out of fear of prosecution for war crimes.4 Al Qaeda training manuals instruct its captured * Brooke Goldstein is a practicing attorney, an adjunct fellow at the Hudson Institute, an award- winning filmmaker and director of the Legal Project at the Middle East Forum. The Legal Project is dedicated to providing pro-bono legal representation to authors, activists and publishers who work on the topics of radical Islam, terrorism and their sources of financing. Goldstein is the founder and director of the Children's Rights Institute, a not-for-profit dedicated to raising awareness about and legally combating the incitement and recruitment of children as suicide bombers. She is also the 2007 recipient of the E. Nathaniel Gates Award for Outstanding Public Advocacy. Aaron Eitan Meyer recently received his Juris Doctor degree from Touro Law Center, and serves as the assistant director at the Legal Project at the Middle East Forum as well as legal correspondent to the Terror Finance Blog. -
Syrian Brotherhood Discourses on Daaʿsh
TRADITIONAL ISLAMISM CONFRONTS A NEW ACTOR: SYRIAN BROTHERHOOD DISCOURSES ON DAAʿSH by ALYSSA GOESSLER A THESIS Presented to the Department of Social Sciences and the Robert D. Clark Honors College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts June 2016 An Abstract of the Thesis of Alyssa Goessler for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in the Department of Social Sciences to be taken June 2016 Title: Traditional Islamism Confronts a New Actor: Syrian Brotherhood Discourses on Daa' sh David Hollenber Exiled from the Syrian political scene for thirty years, the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood seized upon the chaos of the 2011 uprising as an opportunity to revive their dwindling political status in the country. While they have made impressive strides towards this goal, they were certainly not the only organization to utilize the conflict for political ends. Daa' sh-the infamously barbaric Jihadi-Salafi institution-began expanding its operations into Syria as early as 2012. Daa'sh utilizes highly publicized brutality, which continues to revitalize a public dialogue on Islamism, forcing organizations like the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood to grapple with a rapidly evolving political and religious landscape. This Islamist challenge combined with the Ikhwan's struggle to unite various opposition forces has muddled the rhetorical scheme of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood. Add to these challenges some burgeoning internal divisions, and the result is a rhetorical blunder. In this thesis, I analyze Syrian MB public statements on Daa'sh, focusing on the rhetorical tools they rely on to respond to the political Daa'sh poses to the MB's legitimacy. -
Al Qaeda’S Command- And-Control Structure
Testimony of Steven Emerson Before the United States House of Representatives Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence April 9, 2008 Steven Emerson Executive Director Investigative Project on Terrorism www.investigativeproject.org email:[email protected] Introduction: The 2001 invasion of Afghanistan was successful in obliterating much of al Qaeda’s command- and-control structure. Due to a robust and successful counter-terrorist policy made up of good intelligence gathered by the FBI, asset forfeitures and designations by the Department of the Treasury, and other good work by the Department of Homeland Security and other agencies within the intelligence community, the U,S. has fortunately not been hit with another attack since 9-11. Moreover, in the six and a half years since the those horrible, al Qaeda’s direct orchestration of acts of terrorism on the operational level has been somewhat constrained. This is not to say that al Qaeda has not been involved in terrorist attacks and plots since 2001 (training and guidance provided by al Qaeda in the 2005 London transit bombings and foiled 2006 Heathrow plot prove otherwise), but the group’s leaders have relied largely on the power of self- anointed franchises and recognized the power of spreading its message and ideology via the Internet. Extremist Muslims throughout the world have responded to this message and have sought to execute a number of attacks. While most have been stopped, some have been successful, killing hundreds and injuring thousands more, resulting in propaganda coups for al Qaeda and its leadership. Parallel to franchising the al Qaeda ideology, the group has successfully regenerated its operational capabilities in the sanctuary of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) in Pakistan.