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Islamophobia and the American Presidency (Hurlicious!!)
The Pacific Free Press ^ | December 27, 2009 | Steven Salaita

Posted on 12/28/2009 11:34:59 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

The 2008 American presidential election brought into lucid focus longstanding discourses of racial belonging in the United States that have amplified Islamophobia and continue both subtly and explicitly nearly a year into Barack Obama’s presidency. The Islamophobic discourses underlying the 2008 election weren’t novel or newfangled, but they did reinvigorate dormant or tacit narratives of American nationhood as a domain of restricted access.

These narratives of nationhood are replete with nostalgia and the implicit belief that a true American is somebody who is white and Christian. Islamophobia has become an acute element of America’s national identity.

The problem of whiteness and Christianity acting as a synecdoche for proper Americanness isn’t new. Numerous scholars have analyzed it — Valerie Babb, for instance, in *Whiteness Visible*, and, more recently, Joel Olson in *The Abolition of White Democracy*. I don’t want to recapitulate those analyses here. I instead want to focus on how this conflation became a central component of an American presidential election and how it continues today.

It is important to note that valuations of whiteness have never been marginal to American electoral politics. In fact, white majoritarian fear of various minorities, African Americans particularly, has long been a crucial feature of presidential campaign strategies. Even Bill Clinton, often lauded for his honorary blackness, expertly parlayed the white fear and dislike of blacks into electoral success.

The uses of racialist innuendo in American politics, then, aren’t new, but rarely have they been so explicit in the nation’s recent history. In many ways, the tropes of white belonging and minority foreignness were the central component of the 2008 election, especially when it became clear in the late summer that Obama would win. Of special interest is the role of Islamophobic discourses in the idea of American belonging. Islamophobia was its own rhetorical monster during the election, but it intersected in notable ways with extant ideologies of a foreign encroachment on a pristine pax Americana. It is possible even to say that Islamophobia was performed, for its exhibition in many cases followed ideas scripted onto American racial history. That history has developed in notable ways now that Obama has taken office.

There was a pervasive conflation of disparate vocabularies underlying the election, as is generally the case when racism flares up. Obama is secretly an Arab. He is secretly a Muslim. He is secretly a foreigner. These descriptors were used interchangeably, sometimes as a deliberate strategy and at other times out of old-fashioned ignorance.

Moreover, the accusations Obama faced give us a clear sense of how racist ideas can be articulated in an ever-shifting marketplace of public opinion. In today’s United States, the risk associated with Islamophobia is minimal; in some cases, articulating Islamophobia can actually be helpful. This reality clarifies some of the Muslim-bashing directed against Obama, which I will examine momentarily. At this point, I would suggest that the expression of a particular form of racism in the United States doesn’t necessarily denote a specific or isolated prejudice, but what type of prejudice can acceptably be expressed.

Finally, it is important that we don’t view Obama merely as a victim of these racialist discourses. Although he was often their target, he is also one of their instigators. Obama didn’t actively instigate Islamophobia, but he reinforced it by not condemning it and through his modes of response, something I will discuss momentarily. First, let’s explore the discourses of American racial belonging.

If one looks closely at the evolution of the racist and Islamophobic narratives during the election, it becomes clear that there is a causal relation between Obama’s poll numbers and the intensity of the attacks directed against him. The attacks, then, are rooted in the material considerations of the American electoral structure. This fact highlights some of the inherent problems with the American electoral structure itself. It is a structure arising from a capitalistic economy and so it emphasizes the commerce of electability and the business of governance rather than the sincere representation of citizen-subjects in the body politic. The American democratic structure is only democratic insofar as (most) people have a right to vote for a prepackaged candidate; it is not a democracy in the sense of shared power or genuinely representative politics. These shortcomings of the American system underline the usefulness of the racist and Islamophobic discourses that emerged en masse.

The idea that Obama is an Arab highlights a majoritarian identification with whiteness because its incorrect and contradictory deployment reflects the desire of the imperiled white majority to retain the special status that has attended whiteness since America’s inception. “Arab,” then, doesn’t necessarily describe Arabs. It can describe anybody who exists outside the boundaries of proper American-ness, as the election made clear. Such outsiders include Muslims, Africans, African-Americans, South Asians, and even socialists, who somehow were outfitted with atavistic characteristics as if they constitute a racial group themselves.

Take the infamous John McCain town hall meeting—another capitalist appropriation of something originally democratic—in which a supposedly wayward attendee charged Obama with the crime of being Arab. McCain’s troublesome response, that Obama is not an Arab but a good family man, drew lots of attention and some outrage, but most responses missed the point. It is certainly true, as most pointed out, that McCain’s juxtaposition of Arab against the good family man, whatever that is, was a deeply racist formulation, but it seemed that nobody noticed that McCain also called Obama a “citizen,” which presented another notable binary.

The idea that an Arab is dialogically opposed to the normative American, the “citizen,” is actually more prevalent, and more perilous, than the idea that an Arab is incapable of being a good family man. It is in the prejudicial notions of citizenship, defined here as national belonging, that the racialized criteria for American normativity are given their moral and discursive power. In order for the individual to qualify as a citizen, McCain implied, he or she must contravene the physical and cultural qualities of the Arab.

Of comparable peril was the majority response to the notorious exchange. Most folks rushed to condemn the woman for intolerantly proclaiming that Obama is an Arab, or they complained that the Republicans were creating an atmosphere of that sort of intolerance. These are all worthy laments, but they omit any acknowledgement of the most conspicuous victims of the exchange: Arabs and Muslims. By constantly defending Obama against the false charges of his shady Arab and Muslim origin, his open-minded defenders ensured that the categories of Arab and Muslim remain consigned to inflexible foreignness.

Obama’s campaign handlers and Obama himself share guilt in this problem. They were presented with countless opportunities to note that being Arab or Muslim is not an inherently negative attribute, but instead they indignantly proclaimed that Obama is emphatically not of such mysterious background. While Obama did point out a few times that being Arab or Muslim isn’t a bad thing, he reserved such comments until after the election was completed. The discourse was largely unchallenged during the election. This inaction can be taken as a strategy: by disavowing Obama’s connection to Arab and Muslim alterity, his campaign, like McCain’s, sought to benefit from the discourses of American racial belonging that pervaded election conversation.

In fact, it was quite important that Obama was able to benefit from a phenomenon that would seem to have harmed his campaign. If one looks at the anxieties generated by his sinister origin, it becomes clear that Islamophobia acted as the acceptable cover for the more un-PC phenomenon of anti-black racism. This isn’t to say that the Islamophobia and xenophobia directed against Obama were insincere. They were very real, and it is very important that we confront them. From an intellectual standpoint, however, the dialectic between the more deeply-inscribed issue of anti-black racism and the more newfangled Islamophobia presents us with numerous socio-cultural developments of interest.

When faced with the accusations that Obama is an Arab or Muslim, his advisors denied those accusations and then appropriated them tacitly into their own candidate’s public identity. Obama’s vehement denial that he is Arab or Muslim didn’t merely represent an unwillingness to take up for an embattled minority community; it actually further ostracized that minority community by enabling Obama to position his blackness as adequately normative vis-à-vis the immutable foreignness of Arabs and Islam. This strategy hasn’t worked completely, however. Suspicions of Obama’s foreignness, both figurative and physical, remain a crucial part of American political discourse. If we go back to McCain’s assertion that Obama is a citizen, as opposed to an “Arab,” we can see that the invention of the normative citizen in the present United States underlies the frequent demands that Obama produce his birth certificate.

The concept of citizenship in the United States is invested with racialized valuations, as is, in some cases, its legal practices. This problem is one that spans the American political spectrum from liberal to conservative, for the main target of these tendentious notions of national belonging, Obama, also contributed tangibly to the problem. If Obama was best challenged through explicit and implicit charges that he is either a foreign interloper or inadequately American, then Obama’s best defense was to point to even more foreign objects in order to presuppose his own belonging. In this way, the liberal discourses of tolerance reified the racist discourses of American racial belonging.

Post-election phenomena are equally instructive. Immediately after Obama’s victory was confirmed the grandiose fantasies of a post-racial United States emerged. The mythologized versions of Islam reinforced during the 2008 election became subsumed to the new ideology of an unprecedented colorblindness. Many discerning commentators and scholars have deconstructed the mythology of a post-racial America, so I will not concentrate on its general problems here. Instead, I would like to comment on the relationship of this mythology with the preponderance of Islamophobia unleashed during the election.

The idea of post-racialism in the United States is exclusive of Arabs and Islam. Obama can thus benefit from the idea as well as from the modes of racism directed at Arabs and Muslims. The normative national identity Obama’s camp attempted so vigorously to enter into relies on a collective retreat from the dark and unmodern spaces inhabited by Muslims regardless of their actual geographical location. The Arab and Muslim, then, cannot achieve American normativity, for American normativity is immediately negated by the presence of the Arab and Muslim.

To be sure, there are complexities and variations in the post-election conceptions of American national identity, but on the whole it remains a racialized phenomenon, one in which the splendors of modernity derive meaning from a distinctly white and Christian taproot. Even the new multicultural modern in the United States is inclusive of people of color only when they too accept the limitations of American normativity, which can accommodate diversity but cannot accommodate racial provocation. The Arab and Muslim are innately provocative.

The questions about Obama’s real religion and his secret place of birth continue steadily. There is even a group, informally known as “the birthers,” that devotes its time to proving that Obama isn’t a true American. Even though most of those who impugn Obama’s nebulous origin appear to be extreme or ultraconservative, it is important to remember that on this particular issue they are more vocal than they are extreme. That is to say, they articulate in a crude way a sentiment that is widespread in the United States, one that attaches a proper American identity to racialized values and phenotypes.

Most liberals despise the birthers, but they don’t really do much to get at the structures of the problem the birthers so exuberantly represent. In fact, most liberal commentators are eminently complicit in the problem, because in their zeal to prove that Obama is just as American as the next guy they ensure that the next guy remains a metaphorical certainty, a synecdoche of a receding white majority desperate to retain ownership of the America they worked so hard to invent.

******

Steven Salaita’s latest book is *The Uncultured Wars: Arabs, Muslims, and the Poverty of Liberal Thought.

*Article Links:*

McCain Town Hall Meeting: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1008/14479.html

Obama as secret Muslim: http://www.zimbio.com/Andy+Martin/articles/2/Man+Behind+Secret+Muslim+Obama+Rumors+Revealed

Clintonian race baiting: http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2008/01/bubba-obama-is.html

The idea of a post-racial America: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=18489466

Obama and the birthers: http://news.aol.com/main/obama-presidency/article/the-birthers-obama-conspiracy-theory/363461

On Obama not saying being Muslim is not a smear: http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080317/klein


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: birthers; certifigate; hurlicious; idiotalert; impeachobama; islam; kleenexalert; muslims; obama; obamanoncitizenissue; racecard; stuckonstupid; teaparties
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The more they keep this up, the madder we will get. Is that the plan?
1 posted on 12/28/2009 11:35:00 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

W...W..What...?


2 posted on 12/28/2009 11:42:21 PM PST by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously... You'll never live through it.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

A well-written dose of conflated synecdoucheism.


3 posted on 12/28/2009 11:43:27 PM PST by period end of story (Give me a firm spot, and I will move the world.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Steven Salaita ... is that one of Zero’s pen names, it sounds a bit like the type of drivel he wrote before he was running to be messiah.


4 posted on 12/28/2009 11:45:25 PM PST by eclecticEel (The Most High rules in the kingdom of men ... and sets over it the basest of men.)
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To: period end of story
synecdoucheism

*snort*

5 posted on 12/28/2009 11:47:19 PM PST by fhayek
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Maybe it should be called “bombaphobia”. Fear of being blown up by crazed Muslims.


6 posted on 12/28/2009 11:49:20 PM PST by screaminsunshine (!!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Muslims arrive and their goal is to dominate and replace the culture with their own.

Personally I would highly restrict their immigration into any non Muslim country as a natural state of self preservation.

And I mean any non-Muslim nation including America.

7 posted on 12/28/2009 11:55:55 PM PST by Berlin_Freeper (They didn't like " Merry Christmas"... well then - Happy New Year of our Lord 2010!)
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To: fhayek

was it the douche part?


8 posted on 12/28/2009 11:58:29 PM PST by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously... You'll never live through it.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

This nothing but stupidity and human debris on parade; this typical of how devote Marxists write.

Now on to a point…”… Take the infamous John McCain town hall meeting… wayward attendee charged Obama with the crime of being Arab. McCain’s troublesome response, that Obama is not an Arab but a good family man, drew lots of attention and some outrage, but most responses missed the point…”

A-yaw: McCain should have said,
“I am not sure what he is, but I can tell you he should not be president!

“Sounds like to me, McCain was working for the other side and against America; as usual.


9 posted on 12/29/2009 12:05:41 AM PST by ntmxx (I am not so sure about this misdirection!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Yes... and once men and women of this country turn and fight terror with terror, this is how it will be reported:

Members of Britain's newest and fastest-growing protest group intimidate Muslim woman on a train

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2416806/posts

Perhaps some are just fed up with the integration of the "religion of peace" into their culture? The end result will have been caused by the complete and total lack of leadership we are now dealing with in this country on both sides of the political spectrum. Innocents will be hurt... this always happens in times of war.

Very sad there is no one to stop the madness. (God help us all).

10 posted on 12/29/2009 12:07:32 AM PST by antceecee (Bless us Father.. have mercy on us and protect us from evil.)
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To: Vendome

The “douche” part was synecdoche for the larger point of his comment, he said without even the slightest hint of pretense.


11 posted on 12/29/2009 12:07:55 AM PST by fhayek
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To: Berlin_Freeper
Personally I would highly restrict their immigration into any non Muslim country as a natural state of self preservation.

I'd like to see this

moron try to peddle this "diversity" crap in a Muslim country, and see how long it takes for him to be blown up. Instead, let's blame "whitey" for, for everything, in the greatest country on the face of the planet.

But, hey, maybe CNN needs a new "expert" on Muslim-American relations.

12 posted on 12/29/2009 12:11:07 AM PST by period end of story (Give me a firm spot, and I will move the world.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“Let us be clear . . . .”

It ain’t “phobia” (fear), it’s cold, steely hatred.

Or maybe it’s not even really emotional at all anymore - just something akin to the mild annoyance and repulsion of having to pump out the septic tank.


13 posted on 12/29/2009 12:31:11 AM PST by dagogo redux (A whiff of primitive spirits in the air, harbingers of an impending descent into the feral.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Dammit, Vet! Now I gotta barf before bed, and being an old fart, I’ll wake with the taste of it still in my mouth. Puh-lease don’t post this jerk again!


14 posted on 12/29/2009 12:40:52 AM PST by JohnQ1 ("(BHO) can compress the most words into the smallest idea of any man I know." - A Lincoln)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Lets get one thing out in the open right up front. Phobia, no way. Americans are not afraid of islamics we simply do not like people who are dedicated to the destruction of the USA. In fact we are really pissed off at a religion that does everything it can to murder our fellow Americans.
Don't mix up fear and a very justified dislike. They are not the same.
15 posted on 12/29/2009 12:48:00 AM PST by oldenuff2no (I'm a VET and damn proud of it!!! I did not fight for a socialist America!!!!!!!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

What a load of fail this ‘article’ is. Typical lib, multiple use of the same -phobia word. Shows they’ve lost the debate.


16 posted on 12/29/2009 12:49:15 AM PST by darkangel82 (I don't have a superiority complex, I'm just better than you.)
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To: period end of story

Self-hating, 80 IQ lib with terminal Stockholm Syndrome.


17 posted on 12/29/2009 12:50:49 AM PST by darkangel82 (I don't have a superiority complex, I'm just better than you.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
These narratives of nationhood are replete with nostalgia and the implicit belief that a true American is somebody who is white and Christian.

What a pantload!

18 posted on 12/29/2009 1:23:22 AM PST by DTogo (High time to bring back the Sons of Liberty !!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I have a perverse sort of respect for people who have learned how to generate this sort of post-modernist Marxist claptrap.

It’s so cool; you never have to deal with a single fact. It’s all about hegemonic forms of discourse and privileged vocabularies and restricted access.


19 posted on 12/29/2009 1:33:31 AM PST by Arthur McGowan (In Edward Kennedy's America, federal funding of brothels is a right, not a privilege.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Again I have to ask, since when is Islam a "race"?

Also, if I take precautions against being shot, am I bulletphobic?


Frowning takes 68 muscles.
Smiling takes 6.
Pulling this trigger takes 2.
I'm lazy.

20 posted on 12/29/2009 1:36:31 AM PST by The Comedian (Evil can only succeed if good men don't point at it and laugh.)
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