After almost seven decades, Britain and France, nations with divergent political cultures and heirs to contrasting philosophies of 'integration', have proclaimed the failure to integrate their post-war ethnic minorities: at this present time, the 'Muslim'. The 'argument' of this book, therefore, is a question: despite the legal, political and social commitments that emerged from the events of the Holocaust, why do both nations continue to govern minorities on the sites of the law and race?
Through comparative readings of British Asian and Franco-Maghrebian literatures, the author...
After almost seven decades, Britain and France, nations with divergent political cultures and heirs to contrasting philosophies of 'integration', h...