
Review Article
Islam Is a Din not an Identity
Reflections on British Muslims
Author(s): Sara Khan & Sadek Hamid & Jamie Gilham & Rehana Ahmed & Shelina Janmohamed & Anabel Inge & Aminul Hoque & Tony McMahon
Reviewed by: Ruqaiyah Hibell
Review
LOYAL ENEMIES: BRITISH CONVERTS TO ISLAM, 1850–1950. By Jamie Gilham. London: C. Hurst & Co., 2014. Pp. 333. ISBN: 9781849042758.
WRITING BRITISH MUSLIMS: RELIGION, CLASS AND MULTICULTURALISM. By Rehana Ahmed. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2015. Pp. 246. ISBN: 9780719087400.
GENERATION M: YOUNG MUSLIMS CHANGING THE WORLD. By Shelina Janmohamed. London: I.B. Tauris & Co., 2016. London & New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2016. Pp. 340. ISBN: 9781780769097.
THE MAKING OF A SALAFI WOMAN: PATHS TO CONVERSION. By Anabel Inge. New York: Oxford University Press, 2017. Pp. 303. ISBN: 9780190611675.
BRITISH-ISLAMIC IDENTITY: THIRD GENERATION BANGLADESHIS FROM EAST LONDON. By Aminul Hoque. London: Institute of Education Press, University of London, 2015. Pp. 197. ISBN: 9781858566030.
THE BATTLE FOR BRITISH ISLAM: RECLAIMING MUSLIM IDENTITY FROM EXTREMISM. By Sara Khan with Tony McMahon. London: Saqi Books, 2016. Pp. 256. ISBN: 9780863561597.
SUFIS, SALAFIS AND ISLAMISTS: THE CONTESTED GROUND OF BRITISH ISLAMIC ACTIVISM. By Sadek Hamid. London & New York: 2016. Pp. 202. ISBN: 9781784532314