
New Books in Islamic Studies Youshaa Patel, "The Muslim Difference: Defining the Line Between Believers and Unbelievers from Early Islam to the Present" (Yale UP, 2023)
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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. He explores how a prophetic saying about imitation has shaped Muslims' understanding of identity across history. Patel discusses various examples, including forbidden practices and the differing views in Sunni and Shi'i traditions. He also touches on modern debates around cultural representation and the implications for Muslims living in non-Muslim contexts. Finally, he suggests rethinking how we define difference in plural societies.
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Childhood Moment That Sparked The Book
- Youshaa Patel recounts being isolated as the only Muslim child in Edinburgh, which shaped his interest in difference.
- That early experience and a later khutbah in Chicago prompted his decade-long research into imitation and distinction in Islam.
Imitation As A Technology Of The Self
- Patel links tashabbuh (imitation) to mimesis and shows it functions as a technology of the self for shaping Muslim identity.
- He argues Muslim thinkers used imitation discourse to discipline unconscious emulation and to manage belonging.
Tashabbuh Focuses On Visible Markers
- The Arabic term tashabbuh implies resemblance and self-reflexivity and is primarily hadith-based rather than Quranic.
- Patel shows that discourse centers on visible, bodily markers because visibility enables an Islamic public to be recognized.


