Racism in Contemporary Germany

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anti-Muslim Feeling
anti-Muslim prejudice
anti-Muslim Racism
Beauftragte Der Bundesregierung
Category=JBSL
Category=JHB
Category=JPFF
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Category=QDTS
CSU Party
De-industrialized Regions
East Central Europe
East German Woman
East West Difference
Eastern EU Member
Eastern German
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EU Scale
Frg
GDR Society
GDR's History
GDR’s History
Im Land Der
Islamophobic Attitudes
Long Term Unemployment Benefits
migration crisis Europe
National Socialist Underground
nationalism Islamophobia East Germany
Necla Kelek
political sociology
populist movements Germany
Postsocialist Area
postsocialist transformation
Public Engagement
qualitative empirical research
West German
West German National Identity
West Germany
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032260587
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jun 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book presents a critical and empirically informed examination of Islamophobia and related issues of racism and nationalism in Germany today, with particular attention to the East/West distinction. The authors, representing several disciplines such as anthropology, sociology, and media and literary studies, situate the topic in the global and German context of the 2015-16 "migration crisis" and its aftermath, and of the ongoing transformations seen in the postsocialist regions of the European Union.

Since the 2015-16 "refugee crisis," illiberal leaders and parties within Europe have instrumentalized Islamophobia in an attempt to dislodge the traditional political elites. Strikingly, such illiberal movements have been most successful in the formerly socialist areas of the EU. This is mirrored within Germany itself, where political formations with an Islamophobic agenda remain more popular in the East than in the West. This volume examines the reasons for this difference, including not only the ideological heritage of Soviet-dominated socialism but also the effects of western interventions in the formerly socialist areas in and beyond Germany since the end of the Cold War. Some Islamophobic and other hateful tendencies were in fact introduced from, and continue to prosper also, in the West.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Contemporary European Studies.

Ivan Kalmar is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Toronto. Over his career, much of his work has focused on the image of Jews and Muslims in western cultural history. He is the author of Early Orientalism: Imagined Islam and the Notion of Sublime Power (Routledge) and co-editor of the volume, Orientalism and the Jews. More recently, Kalmar’s work has focused on illiberalism in the European Union, and especially in Central Europe. He has guest-edited a special issue of Patterns of Prejudice, dealing with Islamophobia in the East of the European Union, and a special issue on Islamophobia in Germany: East/West, for the Journal of Contemporary European Studies. His latest book is White But Not Quite: Central Europe’s Illiberal Revolt (2022). A special issue on Race and the East of the European Union, co-edited by Kalmar, is scheduled to be published by the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies in the spring of 2022.

Nitzan Shoshan is Professor of Anthropology in the Centro de Estudios Sociológicos at El Colegio de México. His prize-winning book, The Management of Hate: Nation, Affect, and the Governance of Right-Wing Extremism in Germany (2016) is an ethnographic study of young right-wing extremist groups in East Berlin. He has guest-edited a special issue of Anthropological Quarterly on post-Fordist Affect and a special issue of the Journal of Contemporary European Studies on Islamophobia in Germany: East/West. His work has focused on nationalism and the far right in Germany and Europe. He has also written on urban marginality in Mexico and on the ethics of ethnographic fieldwork. Recently, his research has increasingly focused as well on the far right in Latin America. In parallel, he is currently completing a project on the social life of "Heimat" and its relation with political immediacy and the rise of the far right in the Brandenburg countryside.