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Series | Diaspore
Volume 13 | Monograph | Writing about Islam

Writing about Islam

Narrating the Diaspora
open access | peer reviewed
  • Simone Brioni - Stony Brook University, USA - email
  • Shirin Ramzanali Fazel - Scrittrice - email

Abstract

Scrivere di Islam. Raccontare la diaspora (Writing About Islam. Narrating a Diaspora) is a meditation on our multireligious, multicultural, and multilingual reality. It is the result of a personal and collaborative exploration of the necessity to rethink national culture and identity in a more diverse, inclusive, and anti-racist way. The central part of this volume – both symbolically and physically – includes Shirin Ramzanali Fazel’s reflections on the discrimination of Muslims, and especially Muslim women, in Italy and the UK. Looking at school textbooks, newspapers, TV programs, and sharing her own personal experience, this section invites us to change the way Muslim immigrants are narrated in scholarly research and news reports. Most importantly, this section urges us to consider minorities not just as ‘topics’ of cultural analysis, but as audiences and cultural agents. Following Shirin’s invitation to question prevailing modes of representations of immigrants, the volume continues with a dialogue between the co-authors and discusses how collaboration can be a way to avoid reproducing a ‘colonial model’ of knowledge production, in which the white male scholar takes as object of analysis the work of an African female writer. The last chapter also asserts that immigration literature cannot be approached with the same expectations and questions readers would have when reading ‘canonised’ texts. A new critical terminology is needed in order to understand the innovative linguistic choices and narrative forms that immigrant writers have invented in order to describe a reality that has lacked representation or which has frequently been misrepresented, especially in the discourse around the contemporary Muslim diaspora.

Keywords IslamophobiaTransnational Italian StudiesMulticulturalismImmigration literatureTranslationIslamReligious coexistenceIslam in ItalyMemoryPoints of viewDiversity‘Minor’ literatureBelongingHybridityDiasporaCollaborationIslam in EuropeCultural market

Permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-411-0 | e-ISBN 978-88-6969-411-0 | ISBN (PRINT) 978-88-6969-410-3 | Published April 22, 2020 | Accepted March 10, 2020 | Submitted Feb. 20, 2020 | Language it

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