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Islam in America: Adventures in Neo-Orientalism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 March 2016
Extract
In July of 2006, I published an article in the journal Eighteenth Century Studies that I trust none of you ever read. Why should you? Eighteenth-Century Studies is not a venerable site for the study of the Middle East or Islam. However, it was the journal where I first considered a question in early American history that has since gained some currency in contemporary American political discourse. The question: “Could a Muslim be president?”
- Type
- Special Section: On Orientalism at Thirty
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- Copyright © Middle East Studies Association of North America 2009
References
End Notes
1 I remain grateful to former MESA president Mervat Hatem for her invitation to participate on this plenary. For a more detailed account of this debate, see Spellberg, Denise A., “Could a Muslim Be President? An Eighteenth-Century Constitutional Debate,” Eighteenth-Century Studies, 39 (2006), pp. 485–506CrossRefGoogle Scholar. My thanks go to Julia Simon, the journal’s editor, who granted permission for me to re-use formulations initially published therein.
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