What We Are Reading Today: The Rohingya Crisis by Mohammed Abdul Bari

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Updated 18 November 2023
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What We Are Reading Today: The Rohingya Crisis by Mohammed Abdul Bari

Widely known as the world’s most persecuted minority group, the Rohingya in Myanmar are now facing extinction. 

Denied citizenship rights, denied their very ethnic identity, hundreds of thousands have fled Rakhine State in Myanmar over the border into Bangladesh, where they face squalid conditions. 

Many have witnessed death, mutilation and rape, as well as whole villages, what they called home, burning to ashes.  

Mohammed Abdul Bari, a leading British Muslim figure, has no doubt been saying that the Rohingya have been facing genocide. 

In this concise but powerfully argued book, he brings to light the scale and barbarity of their suffering and argues that the international community.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Rituals of War’

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Updated 29 December 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Rituals of War’

  • Bahrani brings together and analyzes facets of war and sovereign power that fall under the categories of representation and display, the aesthetic, the ritualistic, and the supernatural

Author: Zainab Bahrani

“Rituals of War” is an investigation into the earliest historical records of violence and biopolitics. In Mesopotamia, ancient Iraq (ca. 3000–500 BC) rituals of war and images of violence constituted part of the magical technologies of warfare that formed the underlying irrational processes of war. In the book, three lines of inquiry are converged into one historical domain of violence, namely, war, the body, and representation.

Building on Foucault’s argument in “Discipline and Punish” that the art of punishing must rest on a whole technology of representation, Zainab Bahrani investigates the ancient Mesopotamian record to reveal how that culture relied on the portrayal of violence and control as part of the mechanics of warfare. Moreover she takes up the more recent arguments of Giorgio Agamben on sovereign power and biopolitic to focus on the relationship of power, the body and violence in Assyro-Babylonian texts and monuments of war.

Bahrani brings together and analyzes facets of war and sovereign power that fall under the categories of representation and display, the aesthetic, the ritualistic, and the supernatural.