Reading Islamophobia in hegemonic neoliberalism through a discourse analysis of Donald Trump’s narratives

This paper uses the Wittgensteinian method of discourse analysis to analyze the narratives of Islamophobia in Donald Trump’s speeches and interviews. Theoretically, the analysis is informed by hegemonic neoliberal ideology. It argues that to sustain itself, hegemonic neoliberalism must contrast itse...

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Main Author: Prashant Waikar
Other Authors: S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139180
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1391802020-05-18T01:33:43Z Reading Islamophobia in hegemonic neoliberalism through a discourse analysis of Donald Trump’s narratives Prashant Waikar S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Social sciences::Political science Islamophobia Donald Trump This paper uses the Wittgensteinian method of discourse analysis to analyze the narratives of Islamophobia in Donald Trump’s speeches and interviews. Theoretically, the analysis is informed by hegemonic neoliberal ideology. It argues that to sustain itself, hegemonic neoliberalism must contrast itself against other belief systems that it unilaterally denounces as inferior. After having done so, hegemonic neoliberalism then seeks to neoliberalize those belief systems. In this vein, this paper contends that hegemonic neoliberalism has an Islamophobic “face” because it “otherizes” Islam and Muslims in order to justify its neoliberalization of Islam and Muslims. Thus, this paper defines neoliberal Islamophobia as the conceptualization of Islam and Muslims as antithetical to neoliberal values. In all, Trump’s speeches and interviews contain five Islamophobic narratives: (1) radical Islam is the sole cause of terrorism; (2) radical Islamic terrorism is a global existential threat; (3) Muslim refugees and immigrants are a threat to American security; (4) the proposal to suspend entry of Muslim refugees and immigrants to the US; and (5) the faux humanitarian policy of establishing safe zones for Muslim refugees in Syria. The paper concludes with policy implications. 2020-05-18T01:33:43Z 2020-05-18T01:33:43Z 2018 Journal Article Prashant Waikar. (2018). Reading Islamophobia in hegemonic neoliberalism through a discourse analysis of Donald Trump's narratives. Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 38(2), 153-178. doi:10.1080/13602004.2018.1466490 1360-2004 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139180 10.1080/13602004.2018.1466490 2-s2.0-85046015776 2 38 153 178 en Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs © 2018 Institute of Muslim Minority Affairs. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Political science
Islamophobia
Donald Trump
spellingShingle Social sciences::Political science
Islamophobia
Donald Trump
Prashant Waikar
Reading Islamophobia in hegemonic neoliberalism through a discourse analysis of Donald Trump’s narratives
description This paper uses the Wittgensteinian method of discourse analysis to analyze the narratives of Islamophobia in Donald Trump’s speeches and interviews. Theoretically, the analysis is informed by hegemonic neoliberal ideology. It argues that to sustain itself, hegemonic neoliberalism must contrast itself against other belief systems that it unilaterally denounces as inferior. After having done so, hegemonic neoliberalism then seeks to neoliberalize those belief systems. In this vein, this paper contends that hegemonic neoliberalism has an Islamophobic “face” because it “otherizes” Islam and Muslims in order to justify its neoliberalization of Islam and Muslims. Thus, this paper defines neoliberal Islamophobia as the conceptualization of Islam and Muslims as antithetical to neoliberal values. In all, Trump’s speeches and interviews contain five Islamophobic narratives: (1) radical Islam is the sole cause of terrorism; (2) radical Islamic terrorism is a global existential threat; (3) Muslim refugees and immigrants are a threat to American security; (4) the proposal to suspend entry of Muslim refugees and immigrants to the US; and (5) the faux humanitarian policy of establishing safe zones for Muslim refugees in Syria. The paper concludes with policy implications.
author2 S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
author_facet S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
Prashant Waikar
format Article
author Prashant Waikar
author_sort Prashant Waikar
title Reading Islamophobia in hegemonic neoliberalism through a discourse analysis of Donald Trump’s narratives
title_short Reading Islamophobia in hegemonic neoliberalism through a discourse analysis of Donald Trump’s narratives
title_full Reading Islamophobia in hegemonic neoliberalism through a discourse analysis of Donald Trump’s narratives
title_fullStr Reading Islamophobia in hegemonic neoliberalism through a discourse analysis of Donald Trump’s narratives
title_full_unstemmed Reading Islamophobia in hegemonic neoliberalism through a discourse analysis of Donald Trump’s narratives
title_sort reading islamophobia in hegemonic neoliberalism through a discourse analysis of donald trump’s narratives
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139180
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