
New Books Network Youshaa Patel, "The Muslim Difference: Defining the Line Between Believers and Unbelievers from Early Islam to the Present" (Yale UP, 2023)
Jan 4, 2026
Youshaa Patel, an associate professor of religious studies and author of *The Muslim Difference*, dives into the concept of imitation in Islam and its historical significance. He discusses how the prophetic hadith on imitation shapes Muslim identity today, particularly in interreligious contexts. Patel unpacks diverse examples, from dress to ritual, illustrating how Muslims express distinctiveness. He also explores the nuances of permissible imitation and presents insights from influential thinkers like Ibn Taymiyya, framing imitation as a tool for self-discipline and community belonging.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Childhood Isolation That Sparked The Book
- Youshaa Patel recounts being isolated as a child in Edinburgh and how his mother's protest led the family to emigrate to the U.S.
- That early experience shaped his lifelong interest in difference and belonging within Muslim identity.
Hadith As A Discursive Engine
- Patel frames the hadith about imitation as a cluster that shaped Sunni discourse on visible Muslim difference.
- He treats Muslim thinkers as theorists who developed mimesis into a practical technology of the self.
Visibility Is Central To Difference
- The Arabic tashabbuh emphasizes visible resemblance, so debates focus on the body and public markers.
- Visibility matters because public recognition enables an Islamic polity and shapes belonging.

