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Author Archives: Kenan Malik

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THE IMPORTANCE OF A LIT FEST IN DHAKA

November 2, 2019 by Kenan Malik

I am speaking next week at the Dhaka Lit Fest, something I am particularly looking forward to. In a place like Bangladesh, more known in the West for poverty and terror, a literary festival might seem a luxury, a bauble for the rich and cosmopolitan. It is anything but. It is precisely in a country like Bangladesh that such an event becomes so important. Between 2013 and 2016, a series of horrific murders of freethinking and atheist bloggers by Islamists shocked […]

Categories: Culture & Books, International, Kenan Malik • Tags: bangladesh, dhaka, dhaka lit fest, free speech, lahore lit fest

WHAT MAY BE LOST WITH ROJAVA

October 28, 2019 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the deeper loss presaged by the Turkish invasion of northern Syria, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 27 October 2019, under the headline ‘Syria’s Kurds dreamt of a ‘Rojava revolution’. Assad will snuff this out’. 300,000 people displaced. Villages and infrastructure destroyed. Allegations of white phosphorus use. The costs of the Turkish invasion of northern Syria to create a ‘safe zone’ are immense, the latest twist in the seemingly intractable Syrian war. Beyond the immediate human costs, there […]

Categories: International, Justice & Liberties, Women • Tags: abdullah ocalan, assad, democracy, freedom struggles, islamic state, kurds, murray bookchin, omar aziz, pkk, pyd, rojava, sdf, syria, syrian civil war, syrian democratic forces, tev-dem, turkey, women's rights, ypg, ypj

3

A BREXIT POLL NOT AS SHOCKING AS SOME WANT TO BELIEVE

October 26, 2019 by Kenan Malik

‘Most Leave voters… think violence towards MPs is a ‘price worth paying’ for Brexit.’ ‘A majority of Remain voters… think protests in which members of the public are badly injured are a ‘price worth paying’ to stop Brexit.’ So claimed a press release from Cardiff University about a Brexit opinion poll published last week. Professor Richard Wyn Jones, director of Cardiff University’s Wales Governance Centre, and co-director of the Future of England Survey, was ‘genuinely shocked’ by the results. Newspapers, and Twitter, […]

Categories: Britain, Politics • Tags: brexit, brexit violence, british politics, opinion polls

OLD-FASHIONED IN GOOD WAYS AND BAD

October 21, 2019 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the legacy of Harold Bloom, was my Observer column this week. (The column included also a short piece on techno-utopia and techno-dystopia.) It was published on 20 October 2019, under the headline ‘Harold Bloom was right to extol great literature, but was often blind to who was neglected’. There are good ways of being old-fashioned and there are bad. One may seek to preserve important practices or ways of thinking in the face of fashion. One may also […]

Categories: Culture & Books • Tags: dante, harold bloom, identity politics, the canon, the western canon, toni morrison

2

PLUCKED FROM THE WEB #64

October 19, 2019 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. The US is now betraying the Kurds for the eighth time Joe Schwartz, The Intercept, 7 October 2019 The U.S. has now betrayed the Kurds a minimum of eight times over the past 100 years. The reasons for this are straightforward. The Kurds are an ethnic group of about 40 million people centered at the intersection of Turkey, […]

Categories: Pandaemonium

1

THE SHIFTING LINES OF THE PRESENT AND THE PAST

October 14, 2019 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the changing character of anti-German chauvinism and the contested lines of Britain’s relationship to its past, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 6 October 2019, under the headline ‘We can mention the war. Should we now talk about Britain’s darker history?’ ‘I wonder if Kenan Malik is clear that the “Don’t mention the war” episode of Fawlty Towers is intended to make fun of the British obsession with the Second World War that he criticises?’ So wrote an […]

Categories: Britain, History, Politics • Tags: angela merkel, anti-german chauvinism, brexit, don't mention the war, far right, fawlty towers, germany, john cleese, nazism, nigel farage, peterloo, racism, richard tice, susan neiman

27

THE SPEED OF HUMAN IMAGINATION

October 12, 2019 by Kenan Malik

Some sporting moments achieve mythical status because of their sheer audacity. Muhammad Ali’s ‘rumble in the jungle’ defeat of George Foreman in Kinshasa in 1974 to regain his world heavyweight title comes to mind. Others astound with a seemingly impossible perfection such as Nadia Comăneci’s perfect 10 in gymnastics at the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games. And then there are those that astonish by redefining one’s perception of what it’s possible for a human being to achieve. Eliud Kipchoge’s completion of […]

Categories: Sport • Tags: eliud kipchoge, marathon, roger bannister

2

THE POLITICAL GHOSTS OF EUGENICS MAY MATTER MORE THAN THE GENETIC

October 7, 2019 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the political legacy of the eugenics movement, was my Observer column this week. It was published on 6 October 2019, under the headline ‘The spirit of eugenics is still with us, as immigrants know to their cost’. Birth control. Intelligence tests. Town planning. Immigration controls. It’s striking how much of contemporary life has been shaped, at least in part, by the eugenics movement, as Eugenics: Science’s Greatest Scandal, a two-part BBC documentary by science writer Angela Saini and disability campaigner […]

Categories: History, Science & Technology • Tags: adam pearson, aldous huxley, angela saini, beatrice webb, david attenborough, eugenics, forced sterilisation, francis galton, immigration, population control, poverty, richard dawkins, working class

4

TO BE TRANSPORTED SOMEWHERE TRANSCENDENT

October 5, 2019 by Kenan Malik

When the US soprano Jessye Norman appeared on Desert Island Discs in 1981, her first choice was Brahms’s Alto Rhapsody, with the great African American contralto Marian Anderson. Norman had been ten years old when she first heard that recording. “I listened, thinking, ‘But this can’t just be a voice! A voice doesn’t sound this rich and beautiful,’” she told the music critic Matthew Gurewitsch. Many felt the same about Norman, who died last week. Sumptuous. Voluptuous. Shimmering. Majestic. The descriptions of her voice […]

Categories: Culture & Books, Philosophy & Ethics • Tags: jessye norman, music, opera, richard strauss

3

THE RETURN OF UNIVERSALISM TO SOCIAL POLICY

September 30, 2019 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the debates about universal basic income and universal basic services, was my Observer column this week. (The column included also a short piece on the Naga Munchetty controversy.) It was published on 29 September 2019, under the headline ‘These radical ideas might seem utopian but at least they fire the imagination’. Back in May, the shadow chancellor, John McDonnell, suggested that if Labour won the next election it would launch pilot schemes for universal basic income (UBI). The aim of […]

Categories: Britain, Justice & Liberties, Philosophy & Ethics, Politics • Tags: andrew percy, guy standing, howard reed, john mcdonnell, jonathan portes, labour party, ubi, ubs, universal basic income, universal basic services, universalism

1

SOMETHING INSIDE THAT COULD BE SET FREE

September 28, 2019 by Kenan Malik

From the outside, the Italian Chapel on Orkney would barely catch your eye. Yet, it is a remarkable building, with a remarkable history. A house of God that is also is a monument to the human spirit. In January 1942, more than a thousand Italian prisoners of war, captured mainly in North Africa, were brought to Orkney. They were needed to construct the Churchill Barriers – four causeways that today act as links between a number of the southern Orkney islands […]

Categories: Photos • Tags: italian chapel, orkney, photography

6

SEEING THE MESSENGER NOT THE MESSAGE

September 23, 2019 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the dangers of being more agitated by the messenger than the message for both politics and journalism, was my Observer column this week. (The column included also a short piece on the global spread of AI surveillance.) It was published on 22 September 2019, under the headline ‘Boris Johnson’s confrontation: don’t lose sight of the real story’. ‘The problem with politicians and political activists is that they are trapped in their own little bubbles.’ If there’s one complaint […]

Categories: Britain, Politics • Tags: amelia gentleman, boris johnson, british politics, conservative party, journalism, labour party, laura kuenssberg, omar salem, windrush scandal

1

PLUCKED FROM THE WEB #63

September 21, 2019 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. . Modi’s war Praveen Donthi, The Caravan, 22 September 2019 The Indian government has devised certain indicators to find and prove normalcy in Kashmir: the number of primary schools reopened, the number of police stations that have relaxed restrictions in their neighbourhood, the number of active landlines in an age of mobile phones. Reducing […]

Categories: Pandaemonium

9

THE QUESTION WE NEVER ASK ABOUT IMMIGRATION PANICS

September 16, 2019 by Kenan Malik

This essay, on the common features of immigration panics across the globe, was my Observer column this week. (The column included also a short tribute to the photographer Robert Frank.) It was published on 15 September 2019, under the headline ‘From India to Britain, every citizen is harmed by anti-migrant hostility’. In the Indian state of Assam, the authorities are building detention camps for ‘illegal immigrants’, most of whom are Indian citizens. In South Africa, hundreds of Nigerian workers have been airlifted home […]

Categories: International, Race & Immigration • Tags: anti-migrant violence, assam, bangladesh war of independence, bjp, cyril ramaphosa, immigration, immigration panics, india, muslims, narendra modi, national register of citizens, nrc, racism, south africa, windrush scandal, xenophobia

31

‘AN AMERICA WE REFUSED TO LOOK AT’

September 14, 2019 by Kenan Malik

‘A wart-covered picture of America by a joyless man’, wrote the photographer and critic Minor White. ‘A sad poem by a very sick person’, snorted Popular Photography. The object of their scorn was The Americans, a collection of images of American life by the photographer Robert Frank, who died last week, aged 94. It is difficult today to recognize how revolutionary was Frank’s work when it was first published 60 years ago. His style, his mode of observation, his subject matter […]

Categories: Culture & Books, Photos • Tags: photography, robert frank, usa

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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

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“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

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From my photography website Light Infusion

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