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Multicultural Politics: Racism, Ethnicity and Muslims in Britain

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Muslims have come to be perceived as the ‘Other’ that is most threatening to British society. This book argues that what begins as a narrative of racial exclusion and black-white division has been complicated by cultural racism, Islamophobia and an unexpected challenge to secular modernity. Moreover, the idea of ‘race’ as underclass has had to contend with the creation of middle class formations and high levels of participation in higher education among some non-white groups. These plural divisions are not intractable but require us to rethink simplistic and monistic ideas about racism, secularism, liberalism and what it means to be British.Tariq Modood has developed a unique and influential perspective out of his sense that the concerns of South Asians lie at the heart of ‘race relations’ in Britain. This book gathers together a number of his key sociological, political and theoretical interventions, together with a substantial new Introduction and Conclusion, allowing readers to engage with a distinctive analysis of race and religion.Key Combines a discussion of racism and Muslim politics in Britain* Offers an interdisciplinary combination of empirical sociology with political theory of multiculturalism* Challenges the secularist bias of liberals and social scientists

272 pages, Paperback

First published March 15, 2005

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About the author

Tariq Modood

54 books7 followers
Tariq Modood is Professor of Sociology, University of Bristol.

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5 reviews1 follower
April 13, 2020
The first half of it is bloody saucy so I read it in a week! but the second half was quite different in terms of the context that was not really in relation to my studies so I am still struggling to finish it.
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