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      Shari’a Barbie’s Afterlives

      Meridians
      Duke University Press

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          Abstract

          This article investigates a sprawling archive of memes (about “Shakira law,” “shari’a Barbie,” and the “jihad squad,”) and incorporates analysis of the original Serial podcast (about the case of Adnan Syed) to look at the role of metadata and dataveillance in criminalizing and apprehending Muslims. Given technological innovations, like autocorrect functions that “correct” conversations about the “racialization” of Muslims to the “radicalization” of Muslims (to give one example), algorithmic manipulations of data depend on sexualizing and racializing assemblages that tell a familiar story about the way Muslim lives are shaped by the discourses and representations through which they are figured and apprehended. The author explores the way that this archive of memes figures Muslims as a “measurable type”—whereby they are profiled into highly fraught categories, like “terrorist,” through algorithmic interpretations of their online activity—therefore enabling what John Cheney-Lippold calls “soft biopolitics.” Given the ability of this sort of data to materially shape a person’s life, the author looks at the roles of metadata and big data in apprehending Muslims, Arabs, and SWANA-identified people through a biopolitical framing of population, where apprehend is understood in both senses of the word—in terms of understanding Muslims as well as criminalizing them.

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          Most cited references38

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              The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, the Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Meridians
                Duke University Press
                1536-6936
                1547-8424
                October 01 2021
                October 01 2021
                : 20
                : 2
                : 298-322
                Article
                10.1215/15366936-9547896
                b52992eb-550f-4a0d-8a60-c3f47f9ba3fb
                © 2021
                History

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