Al-Britannia, My Country: A Journey Through Muslim Britain
AuthorJames Fergusson
LanguageEnglish
SubjectIslam in the United Kingdom
PublishedLondon
PublisherBantam Press
Publication date
2017
Pages385
ISBN978-0-593-07737-5 (Hardcover)
305.6970941

Al-Britannia, My Country is a 2017 book by Scottish journalist and author James Fergusson investigating Islam in the United Kingdom.

Background and synopsis

Al-Britannia, My Country is an exploration of British Muslim communities amidst rising racial and religious tensions in the United Kingdom. It examines the links between Muslim communities and poverty, government surveillance and social and religious conflicts on issues such as sex and feminism.

Reception

Christopher de Bellaigue, writing for The Guardian described Al-Britannia, My Country as a "compelling and compassionate survey of British Islam" and describes Fergusson as "well placed to discuss the issues of identity, inclusion and the state that are central to the Muslim predicament."[1]

Sam Kiley, Foreign Affairs Editor of Sky News writing for the London Evening Standard depicted the book as "a meandering trek through British Muslim 'heartlands', from High Wycombe to Bradford, Whitechapel to Dewsbury and Glasgow."[2]

In contrast, writing in The Times, Douglas Murray, a neo-conservative writer known for his criticism of Islam, criticised the book as "unforgivably naive and insultingly thin"[3]

References

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