In this Book

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Bringing together scholars and activists, With Stones in Our Hands confronts the rampant anti-Muslim racism and imperialism across the globe today

After September 11, 2001, the global War on Terror has made clear that Islam and Muslims are central to an imperial system of racism. Prior to 9/11, white supremacy had a violent relationship of dominance with Islam and Muslims. Racism against Muslims today borrows from centuries of white supremacy and is a powerful and effective tool to maintain the status quo.

With Stones in Our Hands compiles writings by scholars and activists who are leading the struggle to understand and combat anti-Muslim racism. Through a bold call for a politics of the Muslim Left and the poetics of the Muslim International, this book offers a glimpse into the possibilities of social justice, decolonial struggle, and political solidarity. The essays in this anthology reflect a range of concerns such as the settler colonial occupation of Palestine, surveillance and policing, blackness and radical protest traditions, militarism and empire building, social movements, and political repression. With Stones in Our Hands offers new ideas to achieve decolonization and global solidarity.

Contributors: Rabab Ibrahim Abdulhadi, Abdullah Al-Arian, Arshad Imtiaz Ali, Evelyn Alsultany, Vivek Bald, Abbas Barzegar, Hatem Bazian, Sylvia Chan-Malik, Arash Davari, Fatima El-Tayeb, Hafsa Kanjwal, Ronak K. Kapadia, Maryam Kashani, Robin D. G. Kelley, Su‘ad Abdul Khabeer, Nadine Naber, Selim Nadi, Sherene H. Razack, Atef Said, Steven Salaita, Stephen Sheehi. 

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Half Title, Series Info, Title Page, Copyright
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-viii
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  1. Writing the Muslim Left: An Introduction to Throwing Stones
  2. Sohail Daulatzai, Junaid Rana
  3. pp. ix-xxii
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  1. I. Imperial Racism
  1. 1. A Palestinian Exception to the First Amendment? The Pain and Pleasure of Palestine in the Public Sphere
  2. Steven Salaita
  3. pp. 3-15
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  1. 2. The Perils of American Muslim Politics
  2. Abdullah al-­Arian, Hafsa Kanjwal
  3. pp. 16-34
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  1. 3. Duplicity and Fear: Toward a Race and Class Critique of Islamophobia
  2. Stephen Sheehi
  3. pp. 35-55
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  1. 4. Palestinian Resistance and the Indivisibility of Justice
  2. Rabab Ibrahim Abdulhadi
  3. pp. 56-72
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  1. 5. “From Here to Our Homelands”: An Interview with Lara Kiswani on Radical Organizing and Internationalism in the Post-9/11 Era
  2. Sohail Daulatzai
  3. pp. 73-80
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  1. II. Decolonizing Geographies
  1. 6. Oppressed Majority: Violence and Muslim Communities in Multicultural Europe
  2. Fatima El-­Tayeb
  3. pp. 83-100
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  1. 7. Atlanta, Civil Rights, and Blackamerican Islam
  2. Abbas Barzegar
  3. pp. 101-121
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  1. 8. Like 1979 All Over Again: Resisting Left Liberalism among Iranian Émigrés
  2. Arash Davari
  3. pp. 122-135
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  1. 9. The Only Good Muslim: Immigration Law, Popular Culture, and the Structures of Acceptability
  2. Vivek Bald
  3. pp. 136-155
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  1. 10. Charlie, National Unity, and Colonial-Subjects
  2. Selim Nadi
  3. pp. 156-164
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  1. 11. “Nuts-and-Bolts Organizing, They Work Everywhere”: An Interview with Fahd Ahmed on Mass-Based Organizing and the National Security State
  2. Junaid Rana
  3. pp. 165-180
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  1. III. Technologies of Surveillance and Control
  1. 12. “A Catastrophically Damaged Gene Pool”: Law, White Supremacy, and the Muslim Psyche
  2. Sherene H. Razack
  3. pp. 183-200
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  1. 13. Death by Double-Tap: (Undoing) Racial Logics in the Age of Drone Warfare
  2. Ronak K. Kapadia
  3. pp. 201-218
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  1. 14. The Cry for Human Rights: Violence, Transition, and the Egyptian Revolution
  2. Nadine Naber, Atef Said
  3. pp. 219-243
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  1. 15. Learning in the Shadow of the War on Terror: Toward a Pedagogy of Muslim Indignation
  2. Arshad Imtiaz Ali
  3. pp. 244-257
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  1. 16. How Stereotypes Persist despite Innovations in Media Representations
  2. Evelyn Alsultany
  3. pp. 258-271
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  1. 17. “Grounded on the Battlefront”: An Interview with Hamid Khan on the Police State in the War on Terror
  2. Sohail Daulatzai
  3. pp. 272-284
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  1. IV. Possible Futures: Dissent and the Protest Tradition
  1. 18. To Be a (Young) Black Muslim Woman Intellectual
  2. Su‘ad Abdul Khabeer
  3. pp. 287-297
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  1. 19. Letter from a West Bank Refugee Camp
  2. Robin D. G. Kelley
  3. pp. 298-305
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  1. 20. Sami Al-Arian and Silencing Palestine
  2. Hatem Bazian
  3. pp. 306-325
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  1. 21. Raising Muslim Girls: Women-of-Color Legacies in American Islam
  2. Sylvia Chan-­Malik
  3. pp. 326-335
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  1. 22. The Audience Is Still Present: Invocations of El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz by Muslims in the United States
  2. Maryam Kashani
  3. pp. 336-353
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  1. 23. “Make a Way Out of No Way”: An Interview with Ustadh Ubaydullah Evans on the Islamic Tradition and Social Justice Activism
  2. Junaid Rana
  3. pp. 354-364
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. 365-366
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  1. Contributors
  2. pp. 367-370
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 371-396
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