Publication | Closed Access
“Bands of Others”? Attitudes toward Muslims in Contemporary American Society
347
Citations
45
References
2009
Year
EthnicityXenoracismEducationReligious PluralismPublic OpinionEthnic Group RelationCultural StudiesSocial SciencesReligious PrejudiceReligious Identity StudiesCultural DiversityCultural MainstreamMinority StudiesMuslim EvaluationsSocial IdentityCultureContemporary American SocietySeptember 11Islamic Study
The obvious explanation for the unpopularity of Muslims in contemporary American society centers on the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. However, we contend that feelings about Muslims are shaped primarily by a general sense of affect for groups that fall outside of the cultural mainstream and the personality and value orientations typically associated with such affect. Thus, the current structure of Muslim evaluations should not differ much from that before the 9/11 attacks. Moreover, Muslims may be distinctive in that, unlike most minority groups, they are associated with both positively viewed racial and religious minority groups and with negatively viewed cultural minority groups. Analyses of data from the 2004 American National Election Study and other surveys conducted between 2000 and 2007 strongly support our argument.
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