Title

Mulismophobia, Racialization, and Mistaken Identity: Understanding Anti-Sikh Hate Violence in Post-9/11 America

Document Type

Contribution to Book

Publication Date

2015

Abstract

Following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, a rash of violence against minority communities spread rapidly across the United States. The hate crimes targeted people who resembled the perpetrators of the attacks, and this targeted violence helped crystallize a new racialized category in modern America: "the apparently Muslim." This category incorporates people on the basis of both race and religion, and although it is not an officially recognized racial classification, Jaideep Singh argues that it has become "a defining reality for those who fall under its scope." The most adversely affected have been those belonging to Muslim, Sikh, Arab, and South Asian communities.

Editor

Ruqayya Yasmine Khan

Publisher

University of Texas Press

City

Austin

ISBN

9781477307670

Publication Information

Muhammad in the Digital Age

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