
After Charlie Hebdo
Description
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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?
Reviews / Votes
The attack on Charlie Hebdo has been a transformative event, one that presents particular challenges for freedom of speech. This insightful collection helps us to reflect on how we can develop an alternative narrative on violence, racism and freedom of expression. * Donatella della Porta, Scuola Normale Superiore (Florence) * A unique transnational take on the weaponisation of liberal values after the Paris attacks. After Charlie Hebdo takes Islamophobia apart and equips us for the fight back. * Liz Fekete, Director, Institute of Race Relations * A bold, challenging and forthright collection that raises fundamental questions around issues of race and identity. * Michael Cronin, Trinity College Dublin * These essays offer stimulating perspectives on the violent paradoxes of French liberalism. For English speakers, they give valuable context to the political dynamics behind the Charlie episode. * Nick Riemer, University of Sydney * An engaging contribution to our understanding of the 2015 attacks, examining the media framing of the event and the conflict of values it created in public debate. * Romain Badouard, University of Cergy-Pontoise *More details
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Persons
Des Freedman is Professor of Media and Communications at Goldsmiths, University of London. He is the author of The Contradictions of Media Power (2014) and The Politics of Media Policy (2008). He is also an editor of the journal Global Media and Communication.
Aurelien Mondon is a Senior Lecturer in French and Comparative politics at the University of Bath. His research focuses for the most part on the concepts of populism and racism and their impact on democracy. His first monograph A Populist Hegemony? The mainstreaming of the extreme right in France and Australia was published in 2013.
Gholam Khiabany is a Senior Lecturer in the Dept of Media and Communications at Goldsmiths, University of London.
Content
Part I: The Contested Republic
1. Charlie Hebdo, Republican Secularism and Islamophobia - Aurelien Mondon & Aaron Winter
2. The Meaning of 'Charlie': The Debate on the Troubled French Identity - Philippe Marliere
3. After the Drama: The Institutionalization of Gossiping about Muslims - Valerie Amiraux & Arber Fetiu
4. A Double-bind Situation? The Depoliticization 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' Makes 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 & 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 'Postracial' 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
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