After Charlie Hebdo: Terror, Racism and Free Speech - Softcover

 
9781783609383: After Charlie Hebdo: Terror, Racism and Free Speech

Inhaltsangabe

An incisive and timely analysis of the impact the Paris terror attacks have had on today's struggles over multiculturalism, integration and freedom of speech.

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Über die Autorinnen und Autoren

Des Freedman is a Professor of Media and Communications at Goldsmiths, University of London. He is the author of The Politics of Media Policy, co-author (with James Curran and Natalie Fenton) of Misunderstanding the Internet, co-editor (with Michael Bailey) of The Assault on Universities: A Manifesto for Resistance and co-editor (with Daya Thussu) of Media and Terrorism: Global Perspectives. He is particularly interested in issues of media power and media reform. He is the chair of the UK Media Reform Coalition and on the national council of the Campaign for Press and Broadcasting Freedom. He is an editor of the journal Global Media and Communication and a member of the Goldsmiths Leverhulme Media Research Centre.

Gholam Khiabany is a senior lecturer in the Dept of Media and Communications at Goldsmiths, University of London.

Aurelien Mondon is Professor of Politics at the University of Bath, UK and co-convenor of the Reactionary Politics Research Network. His research focuses predominantly on the mainstreaming of reactionary politics through elite discourse. He is the author of The Mainstreaming of the Extreme Right in France and Australia: A Populist Hegemony? (2013) and co-author of Reactionary democracy: How racism and the populist far right became mainstream (2020) with Aaron Winter. He is the co-editor of After Charlie Hebdo: Terror, racism and free speech (2017) and The Ethics of Researching the Far Right (2024). His work has appeared in various mainstream and expert outlets around the world, including CNN, The Guardian, The Independent, Libération, Newsweek, Le Soir, Mediapart and Al Jazeera.

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After Charlie Hebdo

Terror, Racism and Free Speech

By Gavan Titley, Des Freedman, Gholam Kiabany, Aurélien Mondon

Zed Books Ltd

Copyright © 2017 Zed Books
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-78360-938-3

Contents

Acknowledgements,
Introduction: Becoming symbolic: from Charlie Hebdo to 'Charlie Hebdo' Gavan Titley,
PART I: THE CONTESTED REPUBLIC,
1 Charlie Hebdo, Republican secularism and Islamophobia Aurélien Mondon and Aaron Winter,
2 The meaning of 'Charlie': the debate on the troubled French identity Philippe Marlière,
3 After the drama: the institutionalisation of gossiping about Muslims Valérie Amiraux and Arber Fetiu,
4 A double-bind situation? The depoliticisation of violence and the politics of compensation Abdellali Hajjat,
PART II: THE LONG 'WAR ON TERROR',
5 The whiteness of innocence: Charlie Hebdo and the metaphysics of anti-terrorism in Europe Nicholas De Genova,
6 The visible hand of the state Gholam Khiabany,
7 Symbolic politics with brutally real effects: when 'nobodies' make history Markha Valenta,
8 Extremism, theirs and ours: Britain's 'generational struggle' Arun Kundnani,
PART III: MEDIA EVENTS AND MEDIA DYNAMICS,
9 From Jyllands-Posten to Charlie Hebdo: domesticating the Mohammed cartoons Carolina Sanchez Boe,
10 #JeSuisCharlie, #JeNeSuisPasCharlie and ad hoc publics Simon Dawes,
11 Mediated narratives as competing histories of the present Annabelle Sreberny,
PART IV: THE POLITICS OF FREE SPEECH,
12 Media power and the framing of the Charlie Hebdo attacks Des Freedman,
13 We hate to quote Stanley Fish, but: "There's no such thing as free speech, and it's a good thing, too." Or is it? Bill Grantham and Toby Miller,
14 Jouissance and submission: 'free speech', colonial diagnostics and psychoanalytic responses to Charlie Hebdo Anne Mulhall,
PART V: RACISM AND ANTI-RACISM IN POST-RACIAL TIMES,
15 Not afraid Ghassan Hage,
16 'Je Suis Juif': Charlie Hebdo and the remaking of antisemitism Alana Lentin,
17 Race, caste and gender in France Christine Delphy,
18 The ideology of the Holy Republic as part of the colonial counter-revolution Selim Nadi,
About the contributors,
Index,


CHAPTER 1

CHARLIE HEBDO, REPUBLICAN SECULARISM AND ISLAMOPHOBIA

Aurélien Mondon and Aaron Winter


The attack against Charlie Hebdo in Paris on 7 January 2015 took place in a context in which Islamophobia had become increasingly mainstream in France. The widespread albeit uneven use of the slogan 'Je Suis Charlie' across France and the Western world represented for many an assertion of solidarity, and more specifically identification, with Charlie Hebdo and its championing of liberal Enlightenment and Republican values of freedom of speech. This reaction, we were told, was in response to the threat posed by Muslim extremists and terrorists. However, the boundaries between a critique of extremism and terrorism and that of Islamophobia (and anti-Muslim hate), as well as that between the defence of liberal values, Islamophobia and securitisation, have become increasingly blurry. The string of deadly attacks by those identified or self-identifying as 'Islamist' and linked to IS (however tenuous that link may be) which have taken place since in Paris, Nice and Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray have rendered them ever fuzzier. It is for this reason, and the mapping of these discourses and practices as they relate or are deployed in relation to Islam and Muslims, however loosely defined, that we employ our concepts of illiberal and liberal Islamophobia (Mondon and Winter 2017).

The illiberal articulation of Islamophobia, or 'anti-Muslim' hate, is closest to traditional racism based around exclusivist notions and concepts of race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality and religion, as well as identity itself, and is commonly associated with the extreme right and authoritarian treatment of minority groups and rights. Liberal Islamophobia, on the other hand, apparently rejects but in fact displaces and conceals traditional racism and overt prejudice by constructing a pseudo-progressive binary and narrative. It constructs a stereotypical notion and image of Muslim or Islamic belief and culture inherently opposed to some of the core values espoused in a mythical and essentialised culturally homogeneous, superior and enlightened West, or specific Western nation. In this fantasised picture, the West is argued to embody progress, such as democracy, human rights, free speech, and gender and sexual equality, and, ironically, particularly in terms of the way in which Muslims were and are targeted, tolerance. Although liberal Islamophobia claims to target religion and belief (Islam) on behalf of liberalism as opposed to people (Muslims) to claim its liberal credential and non-racist defence, it does retain the same target – Muslims – as its illiberal counterpart, often under the auspices of 'culture', and is part of a long legacy of anti-Muslim hate in France and wider Europe, dating to colonialism. It can also be used to justify illiberal practices, such as the racialisation, profiling and securitisation of Muslims and Muslim communities, as the boundaries between the two are at times functional and thus blurry. Even before the attack, Charlie Hebdo used its satirical cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed to prove the point about a fantasised version of Islam and Muslims' 'backwardness' (recalling, in a French context, not just liberal Enlightenment Republican ideals, but racist colonial and neo-racist particularist 'cultural' discourses), in an expression of free speech.

In the aftermath of the attack, Charlie Hebdo appeared as a flagbearer for such a civilisational project: 'Je Suis Charlie' was the assertion that the West and France in particular identified with the magazine as its symbol or proxy for freedom of speech, and stood together in solidarity with the West and France for freedom of speech and the attack on it/them/us. However, this was accompanied by developments that would seem contradictory to the liberal values of freedom that Charlie Hebdo allegedly championed and to which Islamists posed a threat: securitisation, states of emergency in which civil liberties would be suspended, a crackdown on so-called 'extreme' speech and a boost for the extremists on the right. In this context, the extreme right Front National (FN), long the standard-bearer of racist hate and right-wing authoritarianism, was able to normalise itself further. By strategically embracing a liberal form of Islamophobia in defence of the Republic, the FN has now placed itself in perfect alignment with the mainstream.

This chapter will examine these developments, focusing on the rise of the FN and the mainstreaming of Islamophobia and anti-Muslim hate in France under the banner of liberalism. It will argue that, while Islamophobia has often taken an illiberal shape, a more mainstream, acceptable and accepted form within a liberal framework has become commonplace within the mainstream political discourse of twenty-first century France, particularly in relation to discourses about Republicanism. It will examine such developments in light of tensions in the Republican tradition between liberalism and reactionary politics that go back to the founding of the Republic and throughout French history. These are revealed and articulated in responses to social and political crises: for example, the transformation and mainstreaming of...

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ISBN 10:  1783609397 ISBN 13:  9781783609390
Verlag: Zed Books, 2017
Hardcover