This volume locates the contemporary study of anti-Semitism and Islamophobia squarely within the fields of race and racism, challenging the extent to which discussion of the racialization of these minorities remains unrelated to each other.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Ethnic and Racial Studies.
Introduction: Racialization and religion: race, culture and difference in the study of Antisemitism and Islamophobia Nasar Meer 1. Faith, culture and fear: comparing Islamophobia in early modern Spain and twenty-first-century Europe François Soyer 2. 'Islamophobia never stands still': race, religion, and culture Raymond Taras 3. Anti-Semitism in Britain: continuity and the absence of a resurgence? Tony Kushner 4. Folk devils and racist imaginaries in a global prism: Islamophobia and anti-Semitism in the twenty-first century Pnina Werbner 5. Interrogating 'new anti-Semitism' Brian Klug 6. A rhetorical discourse analysis of online anti-Muslim and anti-Semitic jokes Simon Weaver 7. Semantics, scales and solidarities in the study of antisemitism and Islamophobia Nasar Meer
Dr Nasar Meer is a Reader and co-Director of the Centre for Civil Society and Citizenship, in the Department of Social Sciences at Northumbria University, UK.