The Islamic Other in Post-9/11 America: Reading Resistance in Hamid and Halaby

Pathik Roy
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Abstract

The terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York on 11th September, 2001, left behind 2977 dead, an altered Manhattan skyline and a changed world order marked by a formidable upsurge of global discourses pertaining to terrorism, multiculturalism, xenophobia, collective memory, and so forth. Indeed, 9/11 inhabits a discursive field of narratives/counter-narratives defying closure. Taking into cognizance this inevitability of myriad discourses, the present paper engages with the politics of the emergence of the discursively constructed Islamic Other in the post-9/11 national imaginary. Using the Foucauldian ideas of Power/Knowledge and “regime of Truth” along with Said’s major premises as are found in the works Orientalism and Covering Islam, the paper attempts to debunk the idea that “innocent”, neutral and objective representations in the media have been the norm. It argues that the fanatical, regressive and jehad-driven stereotype of the Islamic Other that gained visibility/ circulation/ legitimisation in the post-9/11 American socio-political culturescape had a Stateist genesis rooted in the reductive, ahistorical, Manichean binary of “us versus them” which essentially constituted the official discourse. It traces the trajectory of the Arab-American experience from initial erasure/ invisibility to hyper-visibility in the post-9/11 years, a time marked by deep fractures in the civil society where xenophobia, racial profiling and jingoistic patriotism became normalised. One way of generating resistance to such workings of power is by launching a counternarrative through the literary text. Consequently, the paper ends with a detailed engagement with two novels, one by Mohsin Hamid and another by Laila Halaby, that resist the official stereotypes/discourses while foregrounding the various registers of Othering in the post-9/11 years.
后9/11美国的伊斯兰他者:哈米德和哈拉比的阅读阻力
2001年9月11日发生在纽约世贸中心的恐怖袭击,造成2977人死亡,曼哈顿天际线被改变,世界秩序被改变,其标志是有关恐怖主义、多元文化主义、仇外心理、集体记忆等全球话语的可怕高涨。事实上,9/11事件存在于一个叙事/反叙事的话语领域,无视终结。考虑到这种无数话语的必然性,本文研究了在后9/11国家想象中话语建构的伊斯兰他者出现的政治。本文运用福柯关于权力/知识和“真理政权”的观点,以及赛义德在《东方主义》和《覆盖伊斯兰》中提出的主要前提,试图揭穿媒体中“无辜”、中立和客观的表述已成为常态的观点。它认为,在9/11后的美国社会政治文化背景中,对伊斯兰他者的狂热、倒退和圣战驱动的刻板印象获得了可见度/流通/合法化,其根源是国家主义的,根植于简化的、非历史的、摩尼教的“我们与他们”二元对立,这基本上构成了官方话语。它追溯了阿拉伯裔美国人经历的轨迹,从最初的被抹去/不被关注到在后9/11时代的高度关注,这一时期的公民社会出现了深刻的裂痕,仇外心理、种族定性和沙文主义爱国主义变得常态化。对这种权力运作产生抵抗的一种方式是通过文学文本发起反叙事。因此,本文以两本小说收尾,一本是莫辛·哈米德(Mohsin Hamid)的小说,另一本是莱拉·哈拉比(Laila Halaby)的小说,这两部小说抵制了官方的刻板印象/话语,同时展望了9/11之后的各种“他者”的记录。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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