Making the “Other” from “Us”: The Representation of British Converts to Islam in Mainstream British Newspapers

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Abstract

There is now a great deal of literature that shows how Islam and Muslims are routinely represented in negative ways in the mainstream newspapers. With overt or covert reliance on Orientalist discourse, discourses of cultural clash and extremism, including terror, are prevalent. Not only are Muslims less likely to feature in “normal” stories, abuse and prejudice against them is also more unlikely to constitute “news”. British converts to Islam have only recently begun to receive more focused attention, both in academia and in the mainstream press. Occupying a unique position in respect to the idea of the “other” and of integration in a multicultural society, converts offer a powerful point of critique of these concepts. The aim of this study is to understand how and in what discourses British converts to Islam are represented, and thereby contribute empirical knowledge to these theoretical concerns.

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APA

Sealy, T. (2017). Making the “Other” from “Us”: The Representation of British Converts to Islam in Mainstream British Newspapers. Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 37(2), 196–210. https://doi.org/10.1080/13602004.2017.1339500

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