New Books in Intellectual History

Youshaa Patel, "The Muslim Difference: Defining the Line Between Believers and Unbelievers from Early Islam to the Present" (Yale UP, 2023)

Jan 4, 2026
In this enlightening conversation, Youshaa Patel, an Associate Professor of Religious Studies, explores the profound implications of the hadith, "Whoever imitates a people becomes one of them." He examines how notions of imitation have shaped Islamic identity through history, reflecting on personal experiences that fueled his curiosity about Muslim distinctiveness. Patel discusses the evolution of Muslim practices, from distinct rituals to the nuances of appearance. He also highlights modern debates around cultural and religious boundaries, urging a reconsideration of hierarchical distinctions in today’s plural societies.
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ANECDOTE

Childhood Moment That Sparked The Book

  • Youshaa Patel recounts being singled out in primary school in Edinburgh which led his family to emigrate to the United States.
  • That childhood experience and a later mosque sermon about Muslim distinctiveness shaped his research on imitation and difference.
INSIGHT

Imitation As A Social Technology

  • The book frames tashabbuh (imitation) as central to Muslim debates about public visibility and belonging.
  • Patel treats Muslim thinkers as theorists who used mimesis to manage social formation and religious difference.
INSIGHT

Visibility Shapes Religious Boundaries

  • Tashabbuh exceeds mere imitation and centers on visible, embodied markers that signal belonging.
  • Controlling bodily signs (beards, dress, voice) became a way to constitute an Islamic public.
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