British and American Representations of 9-11

Home > Other > British and American Representations of 9-11 > Page 34
British and American Representations of 9-11 Page 34

by Oana-Celia Gheorghiu


  Däwes, Brigitte. 2010. Close Neighbours to the Unimaginable: Literary Perspectives of Terrorist Perspectives—Martin Amis, John Updike, Don DeLillo. Amerikastudien/American Studies 55 (3): 495–517. Trauma’s Continuum—September 11th Reconsidered.

  Dearden, Lizzie. 2016. Why Muhammad May Be the Most Common Baby Boys’ Name in England and Wales. The Independent, 2 September. Available from http://​www.​independent.​co.​uk/​news/​uk/​home-news/​most-popular-baby-names-2015-england-wales-muhammad-mohammed-mohammad-muhammed-a7222191.​html. Accessed 9 July 2017.

  Deleuze, Gilles. 1992. Postscripts on the Societies of Control. October 59 (Winter): 3–7. MIT Press. http://​www.​jstor.​org/​stable/​778828. Accessed 3 May 2014.

  DeLillo, Don. 2001. In the Ruins of the Future. Harper Magazine, pp. 33–40, December.

  ———. 2007. Falling Man. London: Picador.

  Deylami, Shirin 2012 Strangers Among Us: A Critique of Westoxification in Perso-Iranian Political Thought. Umi Dissertations Publishing, ProQuest.

  Donadio, Rachel. 2008. Amis and Islam. The New York Times, March. Available from http://​www.​nytimes.​com/​2008/​03/​09/​books/​review/​Donadio-t.​html?​fta=​y. Accessed 17 Oct 2015.

  Dorman, Michael. 2008. Unravelling 9/11 Was in the Bags. Available from Newsday.​com. Accessed 19 May 2014.

  Dougary, Ginny. 2006. The Voice of Experience—Interview with Martin Amis. Times Online, 9 September. Available from www.​martinamisweb.​com. Accessed 17 Oct 2015.

  Eaglestone, Robert. 2007. The Age of Reason Is Over… an Age of Fury Was Dawning. Wasafiri 22 (2): 19–22.Crossref

  Eagleton, Terry. 2007. Ideology. An Introduction. 2nd ed. London/New York: Verso.

  Elia, Adriano. 2012. ‘My Split Self and My Split World: Troping Identity in Mohsin Hamid’s Fiction‘, in Sell, Jonathan P.A. 2012. Metaphor and Diaspora in Contemporary Writing. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

  Esposito, John, ed. 1999. The Oxford History of Islam. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  ———. 2002. Unholy War: Terror in the Name of Islam. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  ———. 2003. The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  ———. 2014. The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  Esposito, John, and Jon Voll. 2001. Makers of Contemporary Islam. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Crossref

  Estévez-Saá, José Manuel. 2016. Multiculturalism, Interculturalism, Transculturalism and The Reluctant Fundamentalist. Southeast Asian Review of English 53 (1): 1–11.Crossref

  Fischer-Tine, Harald. 2010. Postcolonial Studies. European History Online (EGO), Mainz: The Institute of European History (IEG) Available from http://​www.​ieg-ego.​eu/​fischertineh-2010-en. Accessed 17 Sept 2015.

  Foucault, Michel. 1995. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. Trans S. Smith. New York: Vintage.

  ———. 2002. Truth and Power. In Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Other Writings, ed. Colin Gordon, 109–133. New York: Vintage.

  Gauthier, Tim. 2015. 9/11 Fiction, Empathy and Otherness. London: Lexington Books.

  Gray, Richard. 2011. After the Fall. American Literature since 9/11. London: Blackwell.Crossref

  Hanne, Michael, William D. Crano, and Jeffery Scott Mio, eds. 2015. Warring with Words. Narrative and Metaphor in Politics. London/New York: Psychology Press.

  Hamid, Mohsin. 2007. The Reluctant Fundamentalist. New York: Penguin Books.

  Hanafi, Hasan. 1991. Introduction to the Science of Occidentalism. Cairo (in Arabic, qtd. in Esposito and Voll 2001, 88).

  Huxley, Aldous. 2006. Brave New World. London: Harper Classics.

  Irwin, Robert. 2006. Dangerous Knowledge: Orientalism and Its Discontents. New York: Overlook Press.

  Kaplan, Fred. 2013. Crossing Dangerous Borders: Mira Nair on ‘The Reluctant Fundamentalist’. The New York Times, 19 April http://​www.​nytimes.​com/​2013/​04/​21/​movies/​mira-nair-on-the-reluctant-fundamentalist.​html?​mcubz=​1. Accessed 11 Sept 2017.

  Keeble, Arin. 2014. The 9/11 Novel: Trauma, Politics and Identity. Jefferson: McFarland.

  Khadem, Amir. 2015. ‘Paucity of Imagination. Stereotypes, Public Debates, and the Limits of Ideology in Amy Waldman’s The Submission‘. In Petrovic, Paul (ed.). 2015. Representing 9/11: Trauma, Ideology and Nationalism in Literature, Film, and Television. New York: Rowmann and Littlefield, 67–78.

  Khaleeli, Homa and John Henley. 2014. Muhammad: The Truth About Britain’s Most Misunderstood Name. The Guardian, 1 December. Available from https://​www.​theguardian.​com/​uk-news/​2014/​dec/​01/​muhammad-truth-about-britains-most-misunderstood-baby-name. Accessed 9 July 2017.

  Kunst, Jonas R., Lotte Thomsen, and David L. Sam. 2014. Late Abrahamic Reunion? Religious Fundamentalism Negatively Predicts Dual Abrahamic Group Categorization among Muslims and Christians. European Journal of Social Psychology 44 (4): 337–348.Crossref

  Levinas, Emmanuel. 1979. Totality and Infinity: An Essay on Exteriority. In The Hague. Boston/London: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.

  Lewis, Bernard. 1994. Islam and the West. New York/Oxford: Oxford University Press.

  Lorentzen, Christian. 2011. Shave for Them: The Submission by Amy Waldman. London Review of Books 3 (Nr. 18): 28–29.

  Macfie, Alexander Lyon. 2001. Orientalism: A Reader. New York: New York University Press.

  Mamdani, Mahmoud. 2002. Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: A Political Perspective on Culture and Terrorism. American Anthropologist 104 (3): 766–775. Wiley-Blackwell. Jstor. Accessed on 27 September 2015.Crossref

  McDermott, Terry. 2005. Perfect Soldiers: The 9/11 Hijackers, Who They Were, Why They Did It? New York: HarperCollins.

  McEwan, Ian. 2007. Martin Amis Is Not a Racist. Letter to The Guardian, November. Available from http://​www.​theguardian.​com/​world/​2007/​nov/​21/​religion.​race. 17 Oct 2015.

  McHoul, Alec, and Wendy Grace. 1995. A Foucault Primer: Discourse, Power and the Subject. London: Routledge.

  Metcalfe, John. 2015. Mohammed Is the Most Common New York Taxi Driver Name. CityLab, 14 January. Available from https://​www.​citylab.​com/​life/​2015/​01/​mohammed-is-the-most-common-new-york-taxi-driver-name/​384498/​. 9 July 2017.

  Morey, Peter. 2011a. The Rules of the Game Have Changed: Mohsin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist and Post-9/11 Fiction. Journal of Postcolonial Writing 47 (2): 135–146.Crossref

  ———. 2011b. Framing Muslims in British Television Drama. In Britain and the Muslim World: Historical Perspectives, ed. Gerald MacLean, 265–279. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars.

  Morey, Peter, and Amina Yaqin. 2011. Framing Muslims: Stereotyping and Representation After 9/11. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Crossref

  Morley, Catherine. 2009. The End of Innocence: Tales of Terror After 9/11. Review of International American Studies. Vol. 3.3–4.1, winter 2008/spring 2009: 82–93.

  Musaji, Sheila. 2014. How Hard Is It to Establish a Real Muslim Umbrella Organisation? The American Muslim (TAM), 3 December Available from http://​theamericanmusli​m.​org/​tam.​php/​features/​articles/​how-hard-is-it-to-have-a-real-muslim-umbrella-organization. Accessed 30 July 2017.

  Naber, Nadine. 2008. Look, Mohammed the Terrorist Is Coming! Cultural Racism, Nation-Based Racism, and the Intersectionality of Oppressions After 9/11. In Race and Arab Americans Before and After 9/11: From Invisible Citizens to Visible Subjects, ed. Amaney Jamal and Nadine Naber, 276–304. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press.

  Nacos, Brigitte L., Yaeli Bloch-Elkon, and Robert Y. Shapiro. 2011. Selling Fear: Counterterrorism, the Media, and Public Opinion (Chicago Studies in American Politics). Chicago: Chicago University Press.

  Pipes, Daniel. 1979. Orientalism by Edward Said. Presented to the Inter-University Seminar on Armed Forces and Society, January. Available from http://​www.​danielpipes.​org/​7957/​orientalism. Accessed 17 Sept 2015.

&n
bsp; Pirnajmuddin, Hossein, and Abbasali Borhan. 2011. Writing Back to DeLillo’s Falling Man. The Journal of International Social Research 4 (18): 119–129.

  Pöhlmann, Sascha. 2010. ‘Collapsing Identities: The Representation and Imagination of the Terrorist in Falling Man‘. In P. Schneck and P. Scheweighauser (eds.) 2010. Terrorism, Media and the Ethics of Fiction: Transatlantic Perspectives on Don DeLillo. New York/London: Continuum, 51–64.

  Richardson, Michael. 1990. Enough Said. Anthropology Today 6 (4): 16–19, reprinted in Macfie, A., ed. 2001. Orientalism: A Reader, 208–216.

  Rowe, John Carlos. 2011. ‘Global Horizons in Falling Man‘. In Stacey Olster (ed.) 2011. Don De Lillo—Mao, Underworld, Falling Man. New York: Continuum, 121–134.

  Rushdie, Salman. 2001. Yes, It Is About Islam. The New York Times, November 2, reprinted in Rushdie, Salman. 2002. ‘Not About Islam?’ in Step Across This Line: Collected Non-Fiction 1992–2002, 339–340. New York: Random House.

  ———. 2002. America and Anti-Americans. The New York Times, 4 February Reprinted in Rushdie, Salman. 2002. Anti-Americanism. In Step Across This Line: Collected Non-Fiction 1992–2002, 341–343. New York: Random House.

  Ruthven, Malise, and Azim Nanji. 2004. Historical Atlas of Islam. Harvard University Press.

  Said, Edward. 2003. Orientalism. 3rd ed. London: Penguin Classics.

  Schmemann, Serge. 2001. US Attacked: President Vows to Exact Punishment for Evil. The New York Times, 12 September. Available from http://​www.​nytimes.​com/​2001/​09/​12/​us/​us-attacked-president-vows-to-exact-punishment-for-evil.​html?​ref=​sergeschmemann&​pagewanted=​1. Accessed 19 May 2014.

  Seval, Ayşem. 2017. (Un)tolerated Neighbour: Encounters with the Tolerated Other in The Reluctant Fundamentalist and The Submission. ARIEL: A Review of International English Literature 48 (2): 101–125.Crossref

  Shihada, Isam M. 2015. The Backlash of 9/11 on Muslims in Mohsin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist. International Journal of Humanities and Cultural Studies 2 (2): 451–466.

  Singh, Harleen. 2012. Deconstructing Terror: Interview with Mohsin Hamid on The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2007) (Conducted via Telephone on 12 November 2010). ARIEL: A Review of International English Literature 42 (2): 149–156.

  Solomon, Deborah. 2007. The Stranger—Interview with Mohsin Hamid. The New York Times, 15 April Available from http://​www.​nytimes.​com/​2007/​04/​15/​magazine/​15wwlnQ4.​t.​html?​mcubz=​1. Accessed 11 Sept 2017.

  The Holy Qur’an. 2000. Trans. A. Y. Ali. London: Wordsworth Classics.

  The National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States. 2004. The 9/11 Commission Report. Available from www.​9-11commission.​gov. Accessed 28 Aug 2014.

  The New York Times Editorial Board. 2017. All of Islam Isn’t the Enemy, February 9. Available from https://​www.​nytimes.​com/​2017/​02/​09/​opinion/​all-of-islam-isnt-the-enemy.​html. Accessed 11 Sept 2017.

  Veeser, Harold A. 2010. Edward Said. London/New York: Routledge.

  Waldman, Amy. 2012. The Submission. London: Windmill/Random House.

  Warraq, Ibn. 2007. Defending the West: A Critique of Edward Said’s Orientalism. Amherst: Prometheus Books.

  Žižek, Slavoj. 2013. Neighbors and Other Monsters: A Plea for Ethical Violence. In The Neighbor. Three Inquiries in Political Theology, ed. Slavoj Žižek, Eric L. Santner, and Kenneth Reinhard. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Footnotes

  1In Emmanuel Levinas, ‘Totality and Infinity: An Essay on Exteriority’ (1979).The concept is difficult to grasp in just a few sentences, especially as it is forked in different directions—politics, war and peace, religion, ethics, responsibility—but it essentially refers to an irreducible alterity, one that can never draw closer to the sameness/selfhood. The self and the other remain distinct at all times, as absolute otherness also implies the existence of a system completely outside the self, beyond its reach. Nothing is known about the other, and the encounter is unforeseeable due to this lack in knowledge and experience.

  2Originally, the term ‘Orientalist’ denoted academics and scholars (historians, literary critics, linguists and cultural theorists) who dealt with the study of the Eastern civilisations. With the overt accusations of imperialism brought forth by Said, Orientalism has acquired the implication of mannerism and political agenda hidden by the Westerners’ writings on their Eastern other.

  3All references to Said’s Orientalism in this outline are made to the third edition of the book, published in 2003 by Penguin Classics.

  4In an article entitled ‘Enough Said’ (Anthropology Today 6.4. 1990, 16–19, reprinted in A. Macfie (ed.) Orientalism: A Reader, 2001, 208–16), British expert in Oriental and African Studies, Michael Richardson, provides the context of Marx’s argument, contending that the philosopher referred to peasantry as incapable of representing themselves and therefore in need to be represented, not as being acted upon but as actively seeking for such a representation (212). His critique of Said’s corruption of Marx’s intention revolves around the latter’s alleged naiveté: ‘Does he really believe that anyone actually thinks that images of the Orient are commensurate with what the Orient is actually like?’ (212).

  5‘Much of the personal investment in this study derives from my awareness of being an ‘Oriental’ as a child growing up in two British colonies. […] In many ways my study of Orientalism has been an attempt to inventory the traces upon me, the Oriental subject, of the culture whose domination has been so powerful a factor in the life of all Orientals’ (25).

  6Reference to Al-i-Ahmad’s book is made to the 1984 edition, translated into English by R. Campbell, entitled Occidentosis: A Plague from the West.

  7Pre-Islamic period or ‘ignorance’ of monotheism and divine law; in current use, refers to secular modernity. Jahiliyyah is the domination of humans over humans, rather than submission of humans to God. The term denotes any government system, ideology, or institution based on values other than those referring to God. To correct this situation, Islamist thinkers propose the implementation of Islamic law, values and principles. Radical groups justify militant actions against secular regimes in terms of jihad against jahiliyyah (according to Esposito, J. (ed.) Oxford Dictionary of Islam, 2003).

  8As cases of women terrorists have not been documented yet, except for, perhaps, aiding and abetting their men, as it was the case of Hayat Boumeddiene, wife of the gunner at Charlie Hebdo (Paris, 2015), it has been seen appropriate to drop the gendered language and only use the pronoun he when reference is made to terrorists.

  9Literally, recitation, the Qur’ān is the most significant Islamic text, considered to be the word of Allah dictated by Archangel Gabriel (Jibra’il) to Prophet Mohammed, which endows it with infallibility (The Holy Qur’an 2000, back cover).

  10 Sunnah is the norm for Muslims’ lives as prescribed by Muhammad’s teachings. It is considered synonymous with Hadith (the life of the prophet) by some scholars; whereas others claim that there are differences, in that the Hadith is a narrative. Esposito’s Oxford Dictionary of Islam (2003) defines Sunnah as established custom, normative precedent, conduct, and cumulative tradition, typically based on Muhammad’s example.

  11 Shari’ah is the moral code and religious law. It has its sources both in the Qur’an and the Hadith.

  12All future references are made to the Wordsworth Classics edition of The Holy Qur’an, translated by Abdullah Yusuf Ali (2000).

  13Reprinted as ‘Terror and Boredom: The Dependent Mind’ in M. Amis (2008) The Second Plane, London: Jonathan Cape, 47–93.

  14In the preface to The Second Plane, Amis amends the term, claiming that he would rather prefer being considered an anti-Islamist because ‘phobia is an irrational fear, and it is not irrational to fear something that says it wants to kill you’ (2008a, x).

  15Released by the FBI and translated for The New York Times. Available from http://​www.​theguardian.​com/​world/​2001/​sep/​30/​t
errorism.​september113 [24 October 2015].

  16Dated 1996, the translation of Atta’s testament has been provided by the FBI to the press soon after the attacks. Available from http://​www.​abc.​net.​au/​4corners/​atta/​resources/​documents/​will1.​htm [24 October 2015].

 

‹ Prev