To Be Honest: Voices on Donald Trump's Muslim Ban
To Be Honest is a play script and series of essays reflecting on the ways Muslims are perceived and spoken of in America. With funding from a Mellon Foundation grant, several professors conducted more than two hundred hours of qualitative interviews in Texas with people across religious and political spectrums. Their conversations confirm expected polarizations and reveal new, troubling perspectives.

To Be Honest is a “documentary theater” script born from these interviews, which were used to help create monologues that give a face to the nuanced complexity of what is rarely said aloud. The monologues touch on non-Muslim millennials’ understandings of Islam, racism’s intersection with Islamophobia, the fatigue of “activist” Muslims, the impact of intervention in the Middle East on U.S. military veterans, feminist readings of the hijab, the Trump presidency, and more.

Six essays contextualize the script’s underlying themes and provide material for further study. In these polarizing times, To Be Honest illuminates the striking reality that Americans have vastly different experiences with Islam, from evangelicals who work to convert Muslims with the aim of “helping them achieve peace” to Muslim youth who struggle to make sense of why society dissects their religion.

Students, scholars, readers, and theatergoers will come away with insights that allow them to move beyond limited views of Islam by listening to and engaging with others. To Be Honest is an important script for staging and a valuable tool for dialogue across ideological perspectives.
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To Be Honest: Voices on Donald Trump's Muslim Ban
To Be Honest is a play script and series of essays reflecting on the ways Muslims are perceived and spoken of in America. With funding from a Mellon Foundation grant, several professors conducted more than two hundred hours of qualitative interviews in Texas with people across religious and political spectrums. Their conversations confirm expected polarizations and reveal new, troubling perspectives.

To Be Honest is a “documentary theater” script born from these interviews, which were used to help create monologues that give a face to the nuanced complexity of what is rarely said aloud. The monologues touch on non-Muslim millennials’ understandings of Islam, racism’s intersection with Islamophobia, the fatigue of “activist” Muslims, the impact of intervention in the Middle East on U.S. military veterans, feminist readings of the hijab, the Trump presidency, and more.

Six essays contextualize the script’s underlying themes and provide material for further study. In these polarizing times, To Be Honest illuminates the striking reality that Americans have vastly different experiences with Islam, from evangelicals who work to convert Muslims with the aim of “helping them achieve peace” to Muslim youth who struggle to make sense of why society dissects their religion.

Students, scholars, readers, and theatergoers will come away with insights that allow them to move beyond limited views of Islam by listening to and engaging with others. To Be Honest is an important script for staging and a valuable tool for dialogue across ideological perspectives.
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To Be Honest: Voices on Donald Trump's Muslim Ban

To Be Honest: Voices on Donald Trump's Muslim Ban

To Be Honest: Voices on Donald Trump's Muslim Ban

To Be Honest: Voices on Donald Trump's Muslim Ban

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Overview

To Be Honest is a play script and series of essays reflecting on the ways Muslims are perceived and spoken of in America. With funding from a Mellon Foundation grant, several professors conducted more than two hundred hours of qualitative interviews in Texas with people across religious and political spectrums. Their conversations confirm expected polarizations and reveal new, troubling perspectives.

To Be Honest is a “documentary theater” script born from these interviews, which were used to help create monologues that give a face to the nuanced complexity of what is rarely said aloud. The monologues touch on non-Muslim millennials’ understandings of Islam, racism’s intersection with Islamophobia, the fatigue of “activist” Muslims, the impact of intervention in the Middle East on U.S. military veterans, feminist readings of the hijab, the Trump presidency, and more.

Six essays contextualize the script’s underlying themes and provide material for further study. In these polarizing times, To Be Honest illuminates the striking reality that Americans have vastly different experiences with Islam, from evangelicals who work to convert Muslims with the aim of “helping them achieve peace” to Muslim youth who struggle to make sense of why society dissects their religion.

Students, scholars, readers, and theatergoers will come away with insights that allow them to move beyond limited views of Islam by listening to and engaging with others. To Be Honest is an important script for staging and a valuable tool for dialogue across ideological perspectives.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781595349514
Publisher: Trinity University Press
Publication date: 03/15/2022
Pages: 130
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Sarah Beth Kaufman is an associate professor of sociology and anthropology at Trinity Universityand the author of American Roulette: The Social Logic of Death Penalty Sentencing Trials. She has taught courses on the death penalty and the criminal justice system, and her work has appeared in Qualitative Sociology, Critical Criminology, Law and Social Inquiry, and Punishment and Society.

William G. Christ is a professor emeritus of communication at Trinity Universityand the editor or co-author of five books and more than sixty-five articles and book chapters. His interests lie in bridging the gap between the liberal arts and professional education, and in the challenges of assessing student learning.

Habiba Noor is a visiting assistant professor of education at Trinity Universitywhose work focuses on the Muslim communities in Texas, New York City, and London, as well as on activism and research on Islam and Islamophobia at the local and legislative levels in Texas.

Table of Contents

Contributors ix

Introduction Sarah Beth Kaufman William G. Christ Habiba Noor 1

Part I To Be Honest: Voices on Donald Trump's Muslim Ban (the script) Habiba Noor Sarah Beth Kaufman William G. Christ

Part II Understanding To Be Honest

1 From Private Space to Public Sphere: To Be Honest in Production Stacey Connelly 41

2 All the News… William G. Christ 51

3 The Muslim Question in the 2016 Presidential Election: Regulating Speech, Nationhood, and Gender Habiba Noor 59

4 Conservative Evangelical Interpretations of Islam Van Wagner 69

5 Racializing and Criminalizing Muslims in the United States, 2016 Sarah Beth Kaufman 79

6 Performance and the Dangers of Representation: A Conversation Sarah Beth Kaufman Tahir Naqvi 87

Appendix A Interview Guide 97

Appendix B Questions for Audience and Actor Engagement 99

Bibliography 101

Notes 109

Acknowledgments 119

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