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Author Archives: Kenan Malik

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THE BIGOTRY OF RACE NORMING

June 6, 2021 by Kenan Malik

. This is a (very) short piece on the practice of “race norming” that was published as part of my Observer column, 6 June 2021. It is an important issue, and I will hopefully write a longer article on this issue soon. The NFL, American football’s professional league, is to abandon the practice of “race norming” in assessing compensation for former players with brain injuries. It’s the assumption that black players have lower cognitive functioning than white ones, an assumption that made […]

Categories: Race & Immigration, Sport • Tags: affirmative action, american football, race norming, racism, usa

FOUR COLOURS: YELLOW

May 30, 2021 by Kenan Malik

Continuing my series of posts on photographs composed largely of single colours, in an almost monochromatic fashion, this time yellow. (The previous post was on blue.) For more, check out my photography website, Light Infusion. . Sydney Opera House at sunset . Foggy sunset over the Cambrian hills . Sun and storm over London . Parliament building, Budapest, reflected . London South Bank . Buddha, Dambulla, Sri Lanka . Eden Project, Cornwall . Flower in the wet . Lip (in […]

Categories: Photos

A SHARED FUTURE FROM THE RIVER TO THE SEA

May 25, 2021 by Kenan Malik

. This essay, on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, was my Observer column this week. (The column included also a short piece on cancel culture and hypocrisy.) It was published on 23 May 2021, under the headline “From the river to the sea, Jews and Arabs must forge a shared future”. “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”, runs a Palestinian slogan. Originally a call for a secular state in historic Palestine between the river Jordan and the Mediterranean, it soon […]

Categories: International, Justice & Liberties • Tags: anti-semitism, anti-zionism, benjamin netanyahu, bernard lazare, gaza, hamas, israel, jerusalem, likud, palestine, racism, sheikh jarrah, tony judt, west bank, zionism

15

PLUCKED FROM THE WEB #80

May 23, 2021 by Kenan Malik

The latest (somewhat random) collection of essays and stories from around the web that have caught my eye and are worth plucking out to be re-read. . Ghosts in the land Adam Shatz, London Review of Books, 3 June 2021 The territory it governs lies in ruins, but Hamas has reason to celebrate. While 90 per cent of its rockets were repelled by Iron Dome, Israel’s defence system, 100 per cent hit their other target: the Palestinian Authority, which looks […]

Categories: Pandaemonium

7

FREE SPEECH AND POLITICAL EXPEDIENCY

May 18, 2021 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the government’s plans for free speech, was my Observer column this week. (The column included also a short piece on Michel Barnier’s immigration comments.) It was published on 16 May 2021, under the headline “Challenge bigotry by all means, but outlaw it? I’d rather not”. “Blacks are genetically less intelligent.” “Muslims do not belong in this country.” “It is right to discriminate against gays.” Three bigoted statements. According to a new draft law, the Online Safety Bill, social media companies […]

Categories: Britain, Free Speech • Tags: censorship, free speech, gavin williamson, higher education (freedom of speech) bill, michelle donelan, online harm, online safety bill, prevent, social media, tories, universities

2

NAPOLEON, CHURCHILL AND HORRIBLE HISTORIES

May 12, 2021 by Kenan Malik

. This essay, on the need to acknowledge the complexities of historical figures, was my Observer column this week. (The column included also a short piece on what ancient burials tell us about being human.) It was published on 10 May 2021, under the headline “Let’s be honest – every national hero is tainted by the values of our time”. With distance can come greater perspective. We often better appreciate a physical object, whether a mountain or a monument and its relationship […]

Categories: History, International • Tags: culture wars, emmanuel macron, france, frederick douglass, history wars, napoleon, winston churchill

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FOUR COLURS: BLUE

May 9, 2021 by Kenan Malik

My favourite use of colour in photography is almost as monochrome, minimising the palette of colours being used. So, I thought I might publish a series of posts on photographs using largely single colours, beginning with blue.  And for more, check out my photography website, Light Infusion. . Looking South from Achmore (in Lewis) . Storm over Scapa Flow . Storm over the Brittany Coast . Like a Turner – Mt Field in the Canadian Rockies . Crane and Shard . […]

Categories: Photos

1

GRENFELL, CORRUPTION AND THE HOLLOWED-OUT STATE

May 4, 2021 by Kenan Malik

. This essay, on the corruption revealed by the Grenfell Inquiry, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 2 May 2021, under the headline “Grenfell is still giving up its secrets and they retain the power to shock”. It is not just the broken promise, it is also the pitilessness of it. In February, Boris Johnson told parliament, in the wake of the cladding scandal, that “no leaseholder should have to pay for the unaffordable costs of fixing defects […]

Categories: Britain, Justice & Liberties, Politics • Tags: arconic, boris johnson, building research establishment, celotex, cladding scandal, corruption, cronyism, fire safety act, flammable cladding, free market, grenfell tower, hollowed-out state, kingspan, privatisation, regulation, sleaze, state regulation, the state

2

ORIENTALISM AND AHISTORICISM

May 2, 2021 by Kenan Malik

I wrote a short piece for my Observer column on Edward Said, Hannah Arendt and James Baldwin and why I have come to appreciate them more despite (or perhaps because of) the contradictions in their arguments. I thought it might also be useful as a counterpoint, to publish a short part of my original critique of Said’s Orientalism from my 1996 book The Meaning of Race. It is part of a much longer critique, but gets to the essence of […]

Categories: Culture & Books, Philosophy & Ethics • Tags: aijaz ahmed, edward said, enlightenment, essentializing, greek philosophy, orientalism, west

5

POLICING INEQUALITIES OF RACE AND CLASS

April 27, 2021 by Kenan Malik

. This essay, on the nature of American policing, was my Observer column this week. (The column included also a short piece on a breakthrough vaccine for malaria.) It was published on 25 April 2021, under the headline “US policing is far less about fighting crime than controlling the poor”. ‘Lower-class culture is pathological.” So claimed American political scientist Edward Banfield in his 1970 book The Unheavenly City. For Banfield, unlike the middle class, “the lower-class person lives from moment to moment… unable […]

Categories: International, Justice & Liberties • Tags: 1033 programme, broken windows policy, derek chauvin, edward banfield, george floyd, james quinn wilson, mass incarceration, militarised policing, police killings, policing, poor, racism, thomas sowell, usa, william bratton

3

IMMIGRATION AND THE RACE TO THE BOTTOM

April 20, 2021 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the lessons of Denmark’s refugee policy, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 18 April 2021, under the headline “By demonising asylum seekers, Denmark reflects a panic in social democracy”. What do you call a government so hostile to refugees that it wants to send them back to a country that tortures and “disappears” its critics on a mass scale? Reactionary? Monstrous? In Denmark, they call it social democratic. Denmark is the first European nation to insist […]

Categories: International, Race & Immigration • Tags: danish peoples party, denmark, immigration, immigration policy, mette frederiksen, refugees, social democracy, syrian refugees, working class

2

AUTHENTICITY, IDENTITY AND LUTHER

April 18, 2021 by Kenan Malik

This is a longer version of a short piece published in the Observer, 18 April 2021. The African-American novelist Zora Neale Hurston’s final work, Seraph on the Suwanee, is set among poor Southern whites. Published in 1948, it’s often dismissed by critics as a “whiteface” novel because the lives and diction of the white characters seem too “black”, as if they were really black people in white masks. Hurston dismissed such criticism. “About the idiom of the book”, she wrote to friend […]

Categories: Britain, Culture & Books, Race & Immigration • Tags: authenticity, bbc, black identity, diversity, identity politics, idris elba, james baldwin, luther, zora neale hurston

5

HERE’S TO SOCIAL SPACES

April 13, 2021 by Kenan Malik

. This essay, on the importance of social spaces, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 11 April 2021, under the headline “Full pubs are a sign of communities that work. Let’s toast their return”. There were thousands this week, shivering in some icy pub garden, raising their glass to the next step on the government’s roadmap out of lockdown, as outdoor drinking resumed. At the start of the pandemic, they could have done so in thousands more venues […]

Categories: Britain, Politics • Tags: austerity, clubs, covid 19, libraries, lockdown, music venues, pandemic, poverty, pubs, social spaces, youth clubs

SO, WHAT’S WRONG WITH THE SEWELL REPORT?

April 6, 2021 by Kenan Malik

. This essay, on the report of the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 4 April 2021, under the headline “Yes, we need a more nuanced debate about race. But this flawed report fails to deliver it”. Britain is less racist than it was 40 years ago. Many minority groups in Britain still face racism. Both those claims can be (and are) true. So are these two claims: racism exists in Britain; racism […]

Categories: Britain, Race & Immigration • Tags: anti-racism, race and class, racial disparities, racism, sewell report, tony sewell

1

PAINTING SPRINGTIME

April 4, 2021 by Kenan Malik

It’s spring, the sun is out (at least as I am writing this), there is blossom on the trees, and the end of lockdown is visible. And I was thinking of paintings of springtime. So, here is a selection, from Japanese and Western traditions, and more contemporary works. . Taikan Yokoyama, Spring Morning . Vincent van Gogh, Almond Blossom . Phil Greenwood, Blossom . Reiji Hiramatsu, Cherry Blossoms . Georgia O’Keefe, Cottonwood tree in spring . Ton Dubbeldam, Ocean Spring […]

Categories: Culture & Books • Tags: art, david hockney, georgia o'keefe, hokusai, phil greenwood, picasso, reiji hiramatsu, springtime taikan yokoyama, ton dubbeldam, van gogh

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WELCOME TO PANDAEMONIUM

Kenan Malik

I am a writer, lecturer and broadcaster. My latest book is Not So Black and White: A History of Race from White Supremacy to Identity Politics.

Pandaemonium is a place for my writings, talks and photography. I also have a separate photography website called Light Infusion. You can (occasionally) find me on Twitter, Bluesky and Instagram. And you can contact me by email.

Kenan Malik

MY LATEST BOOK

“A precious provocation… Malik unsettles the absurdities, pieties and default settings of contemporary race-talk.” Paul Gilroy

“A brilliant book… Malik writes with great clarity and a profound sense of purpose. If you want to read just one book on modern racism, this is the one.” Vivek Chibber

Buy it!.

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From my photography website Light Infusion

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