• HOME
  • ABOUT
  • INTRODUCTION
  • EVENTS
  • BOOKS
  • CONTACT
  • twitter
Pandaemonium

Pandaemonium

Main menu

Skip to content
  • HOME
  • ABOUT

Author Archives: Kenan Malik

Show Grid Show List

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

A DAY IN THE PARK

August 12, 2012 by Kenan Malik

London’s Olympic Park, that is. A day of colour, shape and speed. The speed came from, among others, the incomparable Usain Bolt, strolling through the 200m heats and the women in the 5000m heats. The shape from the stadia, especially Zaha Hadid’s Aquatic Centre. And the colour, quite unexpectedly, from the spectacular wildflower planting in the Park.

Categories: Photos

3

I AM TRIBAL ABOUT SPORT, NOT PATRIOTIC ABOUT BRITAIN

August 10, 2012 by Kenan Malik

How times change. There I was sitting in the Olympic stadium with my daughter. She had red, white and blue braids in her hair and was enthusiastically waving a Union Jack. When I was her age I would far rather have burned the flag than waved it. The Union Jack was then the property of jingoists and Empire loyalists, on the one hand, and of neo-fascists on the other. If I saw a pub or a housing estate with Union […]

Categories: Britain, Culture & Books, Sport • Tags: britishness, identity politics, london 2012, multiculturalism, nationalism, olympics, patriotism, sports

5

OUT OF BOUNDS

August 5, 2012 by Kenan Malik

As a coda to my previous post on abuse and how to deal with it, I am republishing this essay on changing notions of incitement that was first published in Index on Censorship in 2008. The essay was written in the context of the debate about the war on terror –  it is an edited version of a talk I gave at an Index on Censorship conference on ‘Extremism and the Law: Free Speech in an Age of Terror’. It does not […]

Categories: Free Speech • Tags: free speech, hate speech, incitement laws, iqbal sacranie, liberties, lyrical terrorist, offence, rushdie affair, salman rushdie, terrorism, war on terror

9

DIVING INTO THE ABUSE POOL

August 1, 2012 by Kenan Malik

The arrest of a Dorset teenager for abuse of, and alleged death threats to, British Olympic diver Tom Daley on Twitter has divided both the Twittersphere and free speech activists.  After Daley, and his partner Pete Waterfield, failed to win a medal in the synchronized diving competition, a Twitter user, @Rileyy_69, tweeted ‘You let your dad down’ (Daley’s father died last year of a brain tumour ). When Daley responded, understandably angry, @Rileyy_69 descended into abuse: Hope your crying now […]

Categories: Free Speech • Tags: free speech, hate speech, tom daley, twitter

8

ON LITTONDALE BAR T’AT

July 29, 2012 by Kenan Malik

I love the Lakes. I am entranced by Skye. But I’m not sure that there is a landscape I find more captivating than the Yorkshire Dales. Yes, they seem forever to be wet, cold, misty and blustery, so much so that you half expect to see Heathcliff come striding across at any moment. Yet the seamless stitching together of bleak fells and pastoral valleys, of limestone and millstone grit, makes for a bewitching landscape. So, some photos taken earlier this month, […]

Categories: Photos

1

I WILL PUT UP WITH EVEN THIS CIRCUS FOR THAT BOB BEAMON MOMENT

July 26, 2012 by Kenan Malik

As an aspiring teenage middle distance runner I once dreamed of competing at the Olympics. I grew up in the golden age of British middle distance running in the 1970s and 1980s. My hero was Steve Ovett, the bad boy of British athletics, arch rival and arch contrast to Sebastian Coe, the smooth establishment figure, whose destiny it always was to become first a Conservative MP and then the organizer of the 2012 London games. I was never either good enough […]

Categories: Britain, Sport • Tags: bob beamon, london 2012, nadia comaneci, olympics, sports, usain bolt

4

ME. MY BRAIN. MY CRIME.

July 13, 2012 by Kenan Malik

‘I’m going to assume that you accept the materialist view of personality, that character/mind is determined by both the brain and environmental factors. You used the examples of trust and anger as emotions that are not necessarily good for the former or bad for the latter. But what about indisputably pernicious tendencies like sexual predation/violence, psychopathy or homicidal urges? If one accepted a materialist conception of the mind, then wouldn’t it be an uncontroversial good to use medical/scientific means to […]

Categories: Science & Technology • Tags: alex rosenberg, crime, free will, julian savulescu, liberties, materialism, mind, moral enhancement, morality, neuroscience, racism, sam harris

6

WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE. IN KENT.

July 8, 2012 by Kenan Malik

Where do the wild things roam? In darkest, deepest Kent. Photos taken at Howlett’s Wildlife Park, within spitting distance of Canterbury Cathedral. A lynx with (half) a rabbit, a serval in hunting mode, a Javan langur, a lion-tailed macaque, a silverback gorilla, and a lynx again.

Categories: Photos

4

WHEN SCIENCE HARKS BACK TO A BIBLICAL VIEW OF MORALITY

July 5, 2012 by Kenan Malik

One of the themes in contemporary discussions of morality of which I have been highly critical is the idea that science can, and should, determine right and wrong.  Morality, as Sam Harris puts it in The Moral Landscape, is an ‘undeveloped branch of science’. Where there are disagreements over moral questions, he argues, ‘science will… decide’ which view is right ‘because the discrepant answers people give to them translate into differences in our brains, in the brains of others and in […]

Categories: Science & Technology • Tags: alex rosenberg, evil, free will, human agency, julian savulescu, morality, plato, religion, sam harris

16

TAKIN’ THE A-TRAIN

July 1, 2012 by Kenan Malik

New Yorker writer Adam Gopnik presented this week a wonderful, sideways look at New York in his BBC Radio 4 documentary ‘Take the A-train’, a history of the A-train and of its importance to New York, to new Yorkers and to jazz. There is also a short video cut of Gopnik’s documentary (with some superb photographs). Take the A Train was, of course, one of Duke Ellington’s great standards, and so here, for no reason other than it is a […]

Categories: Culture & Books • Tags: jazz, music, new york

MULTICULTURALISM – THE BROADCAST

June 24, 2012 by Kenan Malik

My Milton K Wong lecture, ‘What’s wrong with multiculturalism?’, that I gave in Vancouver earlier this month, was broadcast on CBC on Friday. I have already posted the transcript of the talk, in two parts, here and here. (The broadcast has been slightly edited to fit the CBC schedule; the transcript is in full.) There is a Milton K Wong website dedicated to discussion and debate around the themes of the talk.

Categories: Multiculturalism • Tags: anders breivik, british asians, british politics, broadcasts, clash of civilizations, cultural diversity, danish cartoons, europe, far right, french politics, germany, guest workers, immigration, islam, multiculturalism, muslims, racism, riots, rushdie affair, turkish migrants

1

ON THE POETRY OF THE TALIBAN

June 21, 2012 by Kenan Malik

Everything has gone from the world, The world has become empty again. Human animal. Humanity animality. Everything has gone from the world, I don’t see anything now. All that I see is My imagination. They don’t accept us as humans, They don’t accept us as animals either. And, as they would say, Humans have two dimensions. Humanity and animality, We are out of both of them today. So begins Samiullah Khalid Sahak’s poem Humanity. It is a poem about the […]

Categories: Culture & Books, War on terror • Tags: afghanistan, islam, islamism, jihadism, poetry, taliban, war on terror, war poetry

2

NOTES ON RELIGIOUS FREEDOM

June 17, 2012 by Kenan Malik

Given the degree of fractious debate recently over ‘religious freedom’ – from questions of  blasphemy and ‘defamation’ to the storm over gay marriage, from the controversy over the banning of  the burqa to the hostility directed at the ‘Obamacare’ plan to include contraception in health insurance cover – I have been rethinking the question of freedom of religion. These notes are a starting point for debate, not a fully-fleshed out argument. 1 Religious freedom occupies a special place in contemporary political […]

Categories: Atheism & Religion • Tags: christianity, equality, ethics, free speech, gay rights, locke, religion, religious freedom, secularism, spinoza

19

BABUR (NOT JUST) IN LONDON

June 14, 2012 by Kenan Malik

My name is Mo, short for Mohammed, I’m a second-generation immigrant cliché: Twenty-eight, disenfranchised, well educated. My mother is white, but I’m all Paki. My father owns a corner shop where I work, And I owe my allegiance to global Umma. My nation’s the Republic of Islam. So sings Mo, one of four would-be suicide bombers in a new opera Babur in London.  Opera it may be, The Marriage of Figaro it ain’t. Babur in London explores issues of culture, identity, terrorism and history by […]

Categories: Culture & Books • Tags: babur in london, islam, islamism, jeet thayil, music, muslims, opera

3

ICE, ROCK, A BEAR AND AN ENCHANTED FOREST

June 11, 2012 by Kenan Malik

I remember the first time that I saw Sydney Opera House. I had seen innumerable photos of the building. There was, however, a spellbinding beauty in those concrete curves that could only be grasped in their presence, a beauty that no image had ever quite managed to convey. I feel much the same about the Canadian Rockies. It is a landscape much photographed, not least the iridescent turquoise of the lakes, such as Louise, Moraine and Peyto, that have become […]

Categories: Photos

8

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

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!.

SEARCH

SUBSCRIBE TO PANDAEMONIUM

PHOTOGRAPHY

From my photography website Light Infusion

TOP POSTS

  • THE FAILURE OF MULTICULTURALISM
    THE FAILURE OF MULTICULTURALISM
  • WHY HATE SPEECH SHOULD NOT BE BANNED
    WHY HATE SPEECH SHOULD NOT BE BANNED
  • SPLIT BRAIN, SPLIT VIEWS - DEBATING IAIN MCGILCHRIST
    SPLIT BRAIN, SPLIT VIEWS - DEBATING IAIN MCGILCHRIST
  • WHAT'S THE PROBLEM WITH MULTICULTURALISM?
    WHAT'S THE PROBLEM WITH MULTICULTURALISM?
  • EAST, WEST AND THE RENAISSANCE
    EAST, WEST AND THE RENAISSANCE
  • IN PRAISE OF RAY TALLIS
    IN PRAISE OF RAY TALLIS
  • WHAT IS WRONG WITH MULTICULTURALISM? [PART 1]
    WHAT IS WRONG WITH MULTICULTURALISM? [PART 1]
  • JOHN LOCKE AND THE NOT-QUITE-GLORIOUS REVOLUTION
    JOHN LOCKE AND THE NOT-QUITE-GLORIOUS REVOLUTION
  • RETHINKING THE IDEA OF 'CHRISTIAN EUROPE'
    RETHINKING THE IDEA OF 'CHRISTIAN EUROPE'

ARCHIVE

CATEGORIES

  • Academia
  • Atheism & Religion
  • Britain
  • Class
  • Culture & Books
  • Economy
  • Free Speech
  • History
  • History of moral thought
  • Human
  • International
  • Justice & Liberties
  • Kenan Malik
  • Language
  • Multiculturalism
  • Nature
  • Not so Black and White
  • Pandaemonium
  • Philosophy & Ethics
  • Photos
  • Politics
  • Race & Immigration
  • Science & Technology
  • Sport
  • War on terror
  • Women

Search

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Pandaemonium
    • Join 8,629 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Pandaemonium
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...