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Not Your Victim: How Our Obsession with Race Entraps and Divides Us

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Empire and race have become the most discussed – and most problematic – subjects in political and historical discourse. It is now an unquestionable orthodoxy both in academia and in progressive political discourse that European colonial empires – particularly the British – were uniquely evil, the West's 'original sin', and that their legacy continues to underpin systemic racism, injustice, and oppression.

Marie Kawthar Daouda, a Moroccan and French academic who now lives in Britain, argues that this narrative is dangerously wrong. Weaving her personal experience with erudite reflection on history, literature, and politics, she argues that we are all heirs of complex waves of immigration, conquest, and colonization. A closer look at French and British history belies a simplistic worldview wherein all the evil in the world is the result of the peculiarly vicious nature of white, Western colonizers. Indeed, she argues, such a perspective nurtures the very prejudices it claims to fight by valorizing victimhood above individual or collective agency and by denying ethnic minorities any sense of responsibility.

A coruscating attack on the perverse solipsism, moral blindness, and historical illiteracy of 'decolonizing' progressive elites, this book upends our tired debates over colonialism, empire, and immigration. It offers a more nuanced, hopeful vision of our historical self-understanding.

Author: Daouda Kawthar Marie
Publisher: POLITY PRESS
Pages: 192
ISBN: 9781509571697
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2026

Contents
Introduction: A Strange Island

Chapter 1 Where are you really from?

Chapter 2 The Noble Savage, The French Revolution, and Mrs Jellyby

Chapter 3 Places with no statues

Chapter 4 Iconoclasm, old and new

Chapter 5 Must Rhodes fall

Chapter 6 Tolerance, diversity, and neo-orientalism

Chapter 7 Cultural appropriation and cultural gatekeeping

Chapter 8 The Racism of Cultural Suicide

Chapter 9 The triumph of the victim and the rise of 'empowerment'

Chapter 10: Equality: The tyranny of low expectations

Chapter 11 Western roots

Chapter 12 A Christian identity

Conclusion Growing Roots

Marie Kawthar Daouda is a Lecturer in French at Oriel College, University of Oxford. Born and raised in Morocco, educated in the Lycée Henri-IV and at la Sorbonne, her research focuses on representations of good and evil in fin-de-siècle French literature and on the links between politics, literature, and religion in the 19th and 20th century. She regularly writes for The Critic and The Daily Telegraph.

 

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