No God but Man - Husain, Atiya; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

No God but Man: On Race, Knowledge, and Terrorism
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9781478031369
ISBN10:14780313611
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:208 pages
Size:229x152 mm
Weight:445 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 18 illustrations
700
Category:

No God but Man

On Race, Knowledge, and Terrorism
 
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Trade Paperback
 
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Short description:

Atiya Husain reconceptualizes the relationship with Islam in the United States by theorizing race as an epistemology using the FBI’s post-9/11 Most Wanted Terrorist list and its posters as its starting point.

Long description:
Reconceptualizing the relationship between race and Islam in the United States, No God but Man theorizes race as an epistemology using the FBI’s post-9/11 Most Wanted Terrorist list and its posters as its starting point. Atiya Husain traces the origins of the FBI wanted poster form to the work of nineteenth-century social scientist Adolphe Quetelet, specifically his overvalued type of human called “average man.” Husain argues that this notion of the human continues to structure wanted posters, as well as much contemporary social scientific thinking about race. Focusing on the curious representations on the Most Wanted Terrorist list that range from Muslims who lack a race category on their posters to the 2013 addition of Black revolutionary Assata Shakur, Husain demonstrates the ongoing influence of the average man and its relevance even today, proposing a counterweight to the category by engaging Shakur’s turn to Islam in the 1970s in the legal context. In doing so, Husain shows the limitations of race as an analytical category altogether.

“Atiya Husain makes an exciting and original intervention in well-worn debates around Islam, race, and security to illuminate the blind spots on racialization in literature on secularism and Islam and the gaps around secularism and Islam in literature on racialization and Blackness. Analyzing state repression and logics of securitization in profound ways, Husain offers a striking account of genealogies of radicalism, race, and religion.”
Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments  ix
Introduction  1
1. L’Homme Moyen and American Anthropometry  23
2. Assata, The Muslim  51
3. The Rule of Racelessness  83
4. Assata, Black Madonna  107
Conclusion. Race: Theirs and Ours  131
Notes  139
Bibliography  169
Index  185