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At a time when the discourse of a clash of civilisations has been
re-grounded anew in scaremongering and dog-whistle politics over a
Hispanic "challenge" to America and a Muslim "challenge" to
European societies, and in the context of the War on Terror and
migration panics, evocations of al-Andalus - medieval Iberia under
Islamic rule - have gained new and hotly polemic topicality,
championed and contested as either exemplary models or hoodwinking
myths. The essays in this volume explore how al-Andalus has been
transformed into a "travelling concept": that is, a place in time
that has transcended its original geographic and historical
location to become a figure of thought with global reach. They show
how Iberia's medieval past, where Islam, Judaism and Christianity
co-existed in complex, paradoxical and productive ways, has offered
individuals and communities in multiple periods and places a means
of engaging critically and imaginatively with questions of
religious pluralism, orientalism and colonialism, exile and
migration, intercultural contact and national identity. Travelling
in their turn from the medieval to the contemporary world, across
Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas, and covering literary,
cultural and political studies, critical Muslim and Jewish studies,
they illustrate the contemporary significance of the Middle Ages as
a site for collaborative interdisciplinary thinking.
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