Mazrui
will explore cultural prejudice as McAndless Scholar
Ali Mazrui doesn't need to look far for an example that
supports his assertion that racial prejudice is fading
in this country. Barack Obama sits in the oval office,
a clear signal that at least some racial divisions are
closing.
But, as racial prejudice fades, Mazrui says that cultural
prejudice — and, in particular, a prejudice
against Islam — stands ready to take its place.
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Mazrui |
Mazrui, Eastern Michigan University's 2008-09 M. Thelma
McAndless Distinguished Scholar, hopes to engage EMU faculty
and students in discussion and thought about this shift
in human relations when he visits campus March 13-23. The
McAndless endowed chair program brings distinguished artists
and scholars in the humanities to campus. Event details
can be found at http://www.emich.edu/aas/news_events.htm.
Mazrui will present a public lecture, "Africa in Global
Racial Context: From Othello to Obama," March 16, 5:30-7:30
p.m., Student Center Auditorium.
"Negrophobia is beginning to be a thing of the past, where
Islamaphobia is very much the current form of prejudice," said
Mazrui, whose visit to EMU is hosted by EMU's Department
of African-American Studies in the College of Arts and
Sciences. "I will be tracing that all the way back to William
Shakespeare and two plays: "Othello," on one hand, and "The
Merchant of Venice" on the other. My argument would be
that, in Shakespeare's day, to belong to a different religion
was more reprehensible than having a different skin color."
Mazrui, director of the Institute of Global Cultural Studies
and Albert Schweitzer Professor in the Humanities at Binghamton
University — State University of New York, is
a globally acknowledged scholar in African politics, international
political culture, political Islam and the role of language
in society.
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