Affiliation:
1. University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Amherst, MA, USA
Abstract
This article explains variations in misrecognition of domination among the racialized subaltern. I draw on a comparative analysis of the fields of Islam in France and India, informed by the work of Bourdieu and Fanon. I first argue that Bourdieu’s concept of the religious field provides a crucial reframing of the Islamic field whereby religious judgments represent classification struggles over legitimate Islam. Second, I approach misrecognition in the field by distinguishing the field’s discourse from its doxa. I argue that misrecognition varies according to the degree of (1) subaltern minority integration into educational institutions and (2) proximity of the subaltern to the dominant classes. I bring in the work of Fanon, whose writings on the psychological effects of racial domination are a crucial complement to a Bourdieusian analysis. Together, they provide a more refined understanding of misrecognition in racialized religious fields and, in turn, potential for political resistance.
Funder
Institute for Global Conflict and Cooperation
Social Science Research Council
University of California Center for Middle Eastern Studies
University of California Center for Race and Gender
National Science Foundation
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
2 articles.
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