Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

"Well researched and to provide a rich account of the experiences of two communities of Muslim Americans after September 11 without being too generalizing or overreaching."

— American Journal of Sociology
"Saher Selod makes a major contribution to conversations around anti-Muslim sentiment by focusing on the way gender impacts not only how Muslims are profiled and policed, but also how Muslims’ response to surveillance is gendered. She provides a clear, well-organized, and nuanced account of Arab and South Asian Muslims’ unstable relationship with power, privilege, and citizenship in the United States post-9/11. Selod’s work forces scholars and activists to move past a one-size-fits-all approach to dismantling anti-Muslim racism, instead recognizing the importance of intersectionality."— American Religion
"Selod skillfully blends decades of survey data with recent ethnographic research, drawing on personal interviews she conducted with family members and interview subjects in the metropolitan areas of Chicago and Dallas/Fort Worth. Selod carefully lays out the political and economic context of the US 'war on terror' and provides useful historical perspective on the status and experience of Arab and South Asian immigrants within the US, prior to and after September 2001. Selod does a particularly astute job of illuminating the rhetorical processes by which Muslim men and women have been constructed as threatening and/or threatened bodies."— TDR
"Chronicle of Higher Education weekly book list," by Nina C. Ayoub— Chronicle of Higher Education
"This is the book we’ve been waiting for. Scholars of Muslim Americans have long needed a rigorous study of how Muslims get racialized during the War on Terror. Saher Selod has not only provided us with the answers we were seeking but importantly shows how this racialization is both profoundly gendered and deeply institutionalized into today’s surveillance state. A necessary book for our time."— Moustafa Bayoumi, author of This Muslim American Life: Dispatches from the War on Terror
"There is a deep-seated stigmatization of Muslims in the U.S. today. Forever Suspect offers a portrait of this stigmatization and also offers a framework for understanding its character. Selod's work is a fine addition to the sociology of race and ethnicity, immigration, and the Muslim American experience."— Nazli Kibria, author of Muslims in Motion: Islam and National Identity in the Bangladeshi Diaspora


Table of Contents
Introduction

1 Moving from South Asian and Arab Identity to a Muslim Identity

2 Flying While Muslim: State Surveillance of Muslim Americans in US Airports

3 Citizen Surveillance

4 Self-Discipline or Resistance?: Muslim American Men and Women’s Responses to their Hyper Surveillance

5 Shifting Racial Terrain for Muslim Americans: The Impact of Racialized Surveillance

Conclusion: The Future for Muslims in America

Appendix A

Acknowledgments

References

Index

Forever Suspect Racialized Surveillance of

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    A Hardback by Saher Selod

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      Publisher: MW - Rutgers University Press
      Publication Date: 6/28/2018 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780813588353, 978-0813588353
      ISBN10: 0813588359

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      "Well researched and to provide a rich account of the experiences of two communities of Muslim Americans after September 11 without being too generalizing or overreaching."

      — American Journal of Sociology
      "Saher Selod makes a major contribution to conversations around anti-Muslim sentiment by focusing on the way gender impacts not only how Muslims are profiled and policed, but also how Muslims’ response to surveillance is gendered. She provides a clear, well-organized, and nuanced account of Arab and South Asian Muslims’ unstable relationship with power, privilege, and citizenship in the United States post-9/11. Selod’s work forces scholars and activists to move past a one-size-fits-all approach to dismantling anti-Muslim racism, instead recognizing the importance of intersectionality."— American Religion
      "Selod skillfully blends decades of survey data with recent ethnographic research, drawing on personal interviews she conducted with family members and interview subjects in the metropolitan areas of Chicago and Dallas/Fort Worth. Selod carefully lays out the political and economic context of the US 'war on terror' and provides useful historical perspective on the status and experience of Arab and South Asian immigrants within the US, prior to and after September 2001. Selod does a particularly astute job of illuminating the rhetorical processes by which Muslim men and women have been constructed as threatening and/or threatened bodies."— TDR
      "Chronicle of Higher Education weekly book list," by Nina C. Ayoub— Chronicle of Higher Education
      "This is the book we’ve been waiting for. Scholars of Muslim Americans have long needed a rigorous study of how Muslims get racialized during the War on Terror. Saher Selod has not only provided us with the answers we were seeking but importantly shows how this racialization is both profoundly gendered and deeply institutionalized into today’s surveillance state. A necessary book for our time."— Moustafa Bayoumi, author of This Muslim American Life: Dispatches from the War on Terror
      "There is a deep-seated stigmatization of Muslims in the U.S. today. Forever Suspect offers a portrait of this stigmatization and also offers a framework for understanding its character. Selod's work is a fine addition to the sociology of race and ethnicity, immigration, and the Muslim American experience."— Nazli Kibria, author of Muslims in Motion: Islam and National Identity in the Bangladeshi Diaspora


      Table of Contents
      Introduction

      1 Moving from South Asian and Arab Identity to a Muslim Identity

      2 Flying While Muslim: State Surveillance of Muslim Americans in US Airports

      3 Citizen Surveillance

      4 Self-Discipline or Resistance?: Muslim American Men and Women’s Responses to their Hyper Surveillance

      5 Shifting Racial Terrain for Muslim Americans: The Impact of Racialized Surveillance

      Conclusion: The Future for Muslims in America

      Appendix A

      Acknowledgments

      References

      Index

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