After Charlie Hebdo Terror Racism and Free Speech 1st Edition by Gavan Titley, Des Freedman, Gholam Khiabany, Aurélien Mondon – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 1783609419, 9781783609413
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 1783609419
ISBN 13: 9781783609413
Author: Gavan Titley, Des Freedman, Gholam Khiabany, Aurélien Mondon
As the world looked on in horror at the Paris terror attacks of January and November 2015, France found itself at the centre of a war that has split across nations and continents. The attacks set in motion a steady creep towards ever more repressive state surveillance, and have fuelled the resurgence of the far right across Europe and beyond, while leaving the left dangerously divided. These developments raise profound questions about a number of issues central to contemporary debates, including the nature of national identity, the limits to freedom of speech, and the role of both traditional and social media.
After Charlie Hebdo brings together an international range of scholars to assess the social and political impact of the Paris attacks in Europe and beyond. Cutting through the hysteria that has characterised so much of the initial commentary, it seeks to place these events in their wider global context, untangling the complex symbolic web woven around ‘Charlie Hebdo’ to pose the fundamental question – how best to combat racism in our supposedly ‘post-racial’ age?
Table of contents:
Part I: The Contested Republic
1. Charlie Hebdo, Republican Secularism and Islamophobia – Aurélien Mondon & Aaron Winter2. The Meaning of ‘Charlie’: The Debate on the Troubled French Identity – Philippe Marlière3. After the Drama: The Institutionalization of Gossiping about Muslims – Valérie Amiraux & Arber Fetiu4. A Double-bind Situation? The Depoliticization of Violence and the Politics of Compensation – Abdellali HajjatPart II: The Long ‘War on Terror’5. The Whiteness of Innocence: Charlie Hebdo and the Metaphysics of Anti-terrorism in Europe – Nicholas De Genova6. The Visible Hand of the State – Gholam Khiabany7. Symbolic Politics with Brutally Real Effects: When ‘Nobodies’ Makes History – Markha Valenta8. Extremism, Theirs and Ours: Britain’s ‘Generational Struggle’- Arun KundnaniPart III: Media Events and Media Dynamics9. From Jyllands-Posten to Charlie Hebdo: Domesticating the Mohammed Cartoons – Carolina Sanchez Boe10. #JeSuisCharlie, #JeNeSuisPasCharlie and Ad Hoc Publics – Simon Dawes11. Mediated Narratives as Competing Histories of the Present – Annabelle SrebernyPart IV: The Politics of Free Speech12. Media Power and the Framing of the Charlie Hebdo attacks – Des Freedman13. 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 & Toby Miller14. Jouissance and Submission: ‘Free Speech’, Colonial Diagnostics and Psychoanalytic Responses to Charlie Hebdo – Anne MulhallPart V: Racism and Anti-racism in ‘Postracial’ Times15. Not Afraid – Ghassan Hage16. ‘Je Suis Juif‘: Charlie Hebdo and the Remaking of Antisemitism – Alana Lentin17. Race, Caste and Gender in France – Christine Delphy18. The Ideology of the Holy Republic as Part of the Colonial Counter-Revolution – Selim Nadi
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Tags: Gavan Titley, Des Freedman, Gholam Khiabany, Aurelien Mondon, After Charlie Hebdo, Terror, Racism, Free Speech


