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Open Letter: On Blasphemy, Islamophobia, and the True Enemies of Free Expression
96Overview
On January 7, 2015, two gunmen stormed the offices of the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo. They took the lives of twelve men and women, but they called for one man by name: "Charb."
Known by his pen name, Stèphane Charbonnier was editor in chief of Charlie Hebdo, an outspoken critic of religious fundamentalism, and a renowned political cartoonist in his own right. In the past, he had received death threats and had even earned a place on Al Qaeda's Most Wanted List. On January 7 it seemed that Charb's enemies had finally succeeded in silencing him. But in a twist of fate befitting Charb's defiant nature, it was soon revealed that he had finished a book just two days before his murder on the very issues at the heart of the attacks: blasphemy, Islamophobia, and the necessary courage of satirists.
Here, published for the first time in English, is Charb's final work. A searing criticism of hypocrisy and racism, and a rousing, eloquent defense of free speech, Open Letter shows Charb's words to be as powerful and provocative as his art. This is an essential book about race, religion, the voice of ethnic minorities and majorities in a pluralistic society, and above all, the right to free expression and the surprising challenges being leveled at it in our fraught and dangerous time.
Product Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780316311335 |
|---|---|
| Publisher: | Little, Brown and Company |
| Publication date: | 01/05/2016 |
| Pages: | 96 |
| Sales rank: | 1,144,013 |
| Product dimensions: | 4.80(w) x 7.10(h) x 0.50(d) |
About the Author
Charb (Stéphane Charbonnier) (1967-2015) was a French journalist, political cartoonist, and satirist. Born and raised outside of Paris, Charb honed his drawing skills as a teenager and contributed illustrations to his college newspaper and local publications. He joined the staff of Charlie Hebdo in 1992 and held the position of editor in chief from 2009 until his death in 2015. An atheist, pacifist, and staunch advocate of free speech, Charb was known for cartoons that mocked political figures and organized religion.
Table of Contents
Foreword Adam Gopnik vii
Note from the publisher xiv
Islamophobia is the new racism 3
Faith is submission 11
To believe is, above all, to fear
Being afraid is a right
All currents of thought may be criticized
God is big enough to take care of himself
Elitism, condescension, and infantilization 20
Journalists promoting Islamophobia
The Muhammad Cartoons
Politics promoting Islamophobia
An elite who infantilizes Muslims in the name of the struggle against Islamophobia
Heroes in the struggle against Charlie Hebdo's so-called Islamophobia 34
Lawsuits and the clowns who file them
Organizations misdirecting their indignation
Top billing
Freedom of expression and the butterfly effect 48
Respect raised to the level of first principle
Caution and cowardice promoting Islamophobia
Toward the definition of a promising concept 60
Jealous Catholics
What about Judeophobia?
There's no such thing as anti-republican blasphemy!
And what about atheophobia in all this? 79







