Situated within a body of writing that is preoccupied with engagement with terrorism, this article considers the ways in which Nuruddin Farah’s novel, North of Dawn (2018), explores trajectories of radicalization and resilience to violent extremism. Written from an interdisciplinary cultural migration studies perspective, the article understands violent extremism as a complex networked phenomenon. It makes an original contribution by highlighting the role of belonging in trajectories of radicalization and resilience, bringing sociological studies of radicalized violence and resilience to such violence into dialogue with a cosmopolitan literary framework including the works of other diasporic Somali background European writers such as Cristi...
This article critically reviews contemporary understandings of the drivers, objectives, and the soci...
In this article, the term “radicalisation” is discussed as a process that appears to be a defensive ...
In this article, I examine how the politics of representation following September 11, 2001 attacks o...
Somali citizens, both at home and abroad, have been reduced to a life of uncertainty, instability an...
The following thesis aims to look at how reading Nuruddin Farah´s North of Dawn and Randa Abdel-Fatt...
During his exile, Nuruddin Farah believed that he would return to a democratic Somalia once Muhammed...
The increasing number of foreigners to the Shabab numbers mirrors a global dilemma in the fight agai...
This article explores the role of the returnee protagonist in selected works of Nuruddin Farah. Nadi...
This article explores the role of the returnee protagonist in selected works of Nuruddin Farah. Nadi...
Addressing five texts by four Somali authors—Nuruddin Farah’s Yesterday, Tomorrow: Voices from the S...
This article examines the novels The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2007) by Mohsin Hamid and Burnt Shado...
© 2015 The Author. Recently, the Somali diaspora has found itself at the centre of heightened securi...
CHDS State/LocalIn 2008, Minneapolis resident Shirwa Ahmed became the first U.S. suicide bomber; he ...
Abstract A vast amount of social science research has been dedicated to the study of Islamist extrem...
This article critically reviews contemporary understandings of the drivers, objectives, and the soci...
This article critically reviews contemporary understandings of the drivers, objectives, and the soci...
In this article, the term “radicalisation” is discussed as a process that appears to be a defensive ...
In this article, I examine how the politics of representation following September 11, 2001 attacks o...
Somali citizens, both at home and abroad, have been reduced to a life of uncertainty, instability an...
The following thesis aims to look at how reading Nuruddin Farah´s North of Dawn and Randa Abdel-Fatt...
During his exile, Nuruddin Farah believed that he would return to a democratic Somalia once Muhammed...
The increasing number of foreigners to the Shabab numbers mirrors a global dilemma in the fight agai...
This article explores the role of the returnee protagonist in selected works of Nuruddin Farah. Nadi...
This article explores the role of the returnee protagonist in selected works of Nuruddin Farah. Nadi...
Addressing five texts by four Somali authors—Nuruddin Farah’s Yesterday, Tomorrow: Voices from the S...
This article examines the novels The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2007) by Mohsin Hamid and Burnt Shado...
© 2015 The Author. Recently, the Somali diaspora has found itself at the centre of heightened securi...
CHDS State/LocalIn 2008, Minneapolis resident Shirwa Ahmed became the first U.S. suicide bomber; he ...
Abstract A vast amount of social science research has been dedicated to the study of Islamist extrem...
This article critically reviews contemporary understandings of the drivers, objectives, and the soci...
This article critically reviews contemporary understandings of the drivers, objectives, and the soci...
In this article, the term “radicalisation” is discussed as a process that appears to be a defensive ...
In this article, I examine how the politics of representation following September 11, 2001 attacks o...