What’s the fuss about “Islam” and “Muslims” ?
Thinking in an Age of Information Overload
Special Lecture by Dr. Anver Emon
Professor and Canada Research Chair in Religion, Pluralism, and the Rule of Law
University of Toronto Faculty of Law
Moderated by Cheryl Milne, Executive Director of the Asper Centre for Constitutional Rights
Tuesday February 28, 2017, 12:30-2:00pm
Room J140—Jackman Law Building, 78 Queen’s Park
(No Registration required * Light lunch provided)
From the Brexit referendum in the UK, the election of Donald Trump in the US, and the most recent tragedy at a mosque in Quebec City, it is hard not to notice that politicians of various stripes have “Islam” and “Muslims” on the brain. So many want to talk about what “Islam” is or who “Muslims” really are. In this talk, we will explore the political work done when “Islam” and “Muslim” are invoked. Whether as social constructions or literary tropes, “Islam” and “Muslim” become proxies for something that all of us have a stake in defining, but must now reclaim as our own. Professor Emon will offer a framework for filtering the random bits of information that fall from the Twitter-sphere.
Participants are invited to submit in advance a media headline and story that they want to discuss and problematize. Please visit the Events page of www.aspercentre.ca and link on Dr. Emon’s event to submit.
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