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New English Review

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(Not to be confused with The English Review, 1908-1937)
New English Review  
|Subject |Discipline}}Literature
LanguageEnglish
Edited byRebecca Bynum
Publication details
History2006–present
Publisher
World Encounter Institute
FrequencyMonthly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4New Engl. Rev.
Indexing
OCLC no.608163485
Links

The New English Review is an online monthly magazine of cultural criticism, published from Nashville, Tennessee, since February 2006.[1] Scholars note the magazine to have platformed a range of far-right Islamophobic discourse including conspiracy theories. An eponymous press is run by the same publisher.[1]

Profile

The magazine was funded by Roy Bishko, owner of Tie Rack.[2] Editor Rebecca Bynum was a long-time collaborator with Robert B. Spencer, a noted far-right Islamophobe activist, before heralding NER.[2][3]

Reception

Sveinung Sandberg, a criminologist at the University of Oslo, notes Anders Breivik to have been inspired and motivated by anti-Islamic discourse on sites including NER.[4] Sindre Bangstad, a social anthropologist at University of Oslo, described the site as a "counter-jihadist publication" in discussing how the spread of Islamophobia within right-wing political networks of Norway had birthed Breivik.[5] Joel Busher, a sociologist at the Coventry University, found NER to be part of the broader counter-jihad ecosystem which lamented the "failings of Western liberalism" to resist the "cultural loss" of Europe in the wake of increasing Muslim immigration; it hosted content that was sympathetic to the English Defence League, a far-right, Islamophobic organization in the United Kingdom.[6]

Cynthia Miller-Idriss, a sociologist at American University who specializes in far-right extremism, notes the journal to have platformed favorable reviews of Bat Ye'or's works propounding Eurabia — a far-right anti-Muslim conspiracy theory, involving globalist entities allegedly led by French and Arab powers, to Islamise and Arabise Europe.[7] Joe Turner, a political scientist at the University of York, found Peter McLoughlin's monograph on grooming in UK, published by the press in 2016, to be intimately linked with Islamophobia and white nationalism — McLoughlin was more anxious about protecting "white Britishness" from "Islam" than individual bodies.[8] Ella Cockbain, a criminologist at University College London, found the book to be far-right propaganda in that it accused the entire Muslim community of colluding with the groomers and took digs at multiculturalism; NER itself was described as a "conservative magazine heavily involved in the 'counter-jihad' movement".[9]

Bynum's monograph on why Islam is not a religion, published by the press in 2011, has been noted to fuel Islamophobia.[10] Lorenz Langer, a professor of law at University of Zurich, noted her to be among those who made a living by "churning out alarmist accounts of the threat that Islam poses to the Occident".[11] Philip Dorling, while describing the attempts by Pauline Hanson's One Nation to have Islam unconsidered as a religion, found synonymities with Bynum, editor of the "far-right" NER.[12]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Mission Statement". World Encounter Institute. https://www.newenglishreview.org/world-encounter-institute/. Retrieved 2 March 2019. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Carr, Julie (2021-02-10). "Nashville Based New English Review Publisher and Editor Rebecca Bynum Talks Business and Conservative Media" (in en-US). https://tennesseestar.com/2021/02/10/nashville-based-new-english-review-publisher-and-editor-rebecca-bynum-talks-business-and-conservative-media/. 
  3. Smietana, Bob. "Anti-Muslim crusaders make millions spreading fear" (in en-US). https://www.tennessean.com/story/news/local/2010/10/24/antimuslim-crusaders-make-millions-spreading-fear/28936467/. 
  4. Sveinung Sandberg (2013). "Are self-narratives strategic or determined, unified or fragmented? Reading Breivik's Manifesto in light of narrative criminology". Acta Sociologica 56 (1): 74. 
  5. Bagstad, Sindre (2014) (in en). Anders Breivik and the Rise of Islamophobia. London: Zed Books. pp. 149. 
  6. Joel Busher (October 23, 2015). The Making of Anti-Muslim Protest. Taylor & Francis. p. 85. 
  7. Miller-Idriss, Cynthia (2020). Hate in the Homeland: The New Global Far Right. Princeton University Press. pp. 181. 
  8. Turner, Joe (2020) (in en-UK). Bordering intimacy: Postcolonial governance and the policing of family. Theory for a Global Age. Manchester: Manchester University Press. pp. 149. 
  9. Cockbain, Ella; Tufail, Waqas (January 2020). "Failing victims, fuelling hate: challenging the harms of the 'Muslim grooming gangs' narrative" (in en). Race & Class 61 (3): 9, 25. doi:10.1177/0306396819895727. ISSN 0306-3968. https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10087386/. 
  10. Ul-Haq, Shoaib; Westwood, Robert (March 2012). "The politics of knowledge, epistemological occlusion and Islamic management and organization knowledge" (in en). Organization 19 (2): 251. doi:10.1177/1350508411429399. ISSN 1350-5084. 
  11. Langer, Lorenz (2014), "Defining defamation", Religious Offence and Human Rights: The Implications of Defamation of Religions, Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press): pp. 245, ISBN 978-1-107-03957-5, https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/religious-offence-and-human-rights/defining-defamation/F67757AC06912C9CC339FA946F41A7F1 
  12. The American far-right origins of Pauline Hanson's views on Islam. The Australia Institute, 29 January 2017




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