Hi, Miss Lailami. Thanks for agreeing to meet me for lunch. I hope you don't mind, but I took the liberty of ordering couscous as an appetizer. Should be here in a minute.
First of all, excellent book. I love your novels, but as it turns out, you're pretty good at . . I don't want to say "non-fiction," that's too broad a category. Since you're arguing a point, it's an essay; since you're reporting a fact, it's journalism; since you've done so much research, it's scholarship. So the term "non-fiction" says nothing and everything at once. You're a linguist, so you have a better grasp on the inadequacies of genre labels more than I do.
If I'm being honest, though, I felt more affirmation than amazement at your work. You and I agree on pretty much every major point, so you're the kind of public intellectual I'm going to cite in arguments. Don't get me wrong, you're providing a valuable service. But it seems like you've provided a new name, "conditional citizenship," for the inequality that we both recognize. It's an interesting idea, but not a radical one. That said, I love the fact that you pointed out the difference between "expatriates" and "migrants." Brilliant insight.
And I'd like to dispute a couple of minor points, if I may. You're 100% right that it's hard to discuss "whiteness" or "white identity" without triggering a backlash. But you claim it results from a lack of context. I'm going to counter that it results from too much context, that the word "white" denoted integrity and autonomy for so long, e.g. "that's mighty white of you" and "I'm free, white and 21," that it's impossible to discuss white identity without alluding to its racist legacy That's why neo-Nazis appropriated the term "white' for their supremacist organizations, not because the word was meaningless.
And again, you're absolutely right that dark-skinned mass murderers are "terrorists" while light-skinned mass murderers are "mentally ill." But is that not, in itself, a stereotype? That white males become deluded heavily armed incels? I'm not saying it's a form of discrimination, I'm saying it's the kind of racial profiling that prevents a deeper analysis of the social pathologies that create these killers.
Like I said, though, I'm being picayune, enjoyed the book, always love your work. Damn, I love this couscous. Hey, can you identify the seasonings so I can tell my wife how to make it? I know you said you don't cook, but come on, you were born in Morocco, you must know . . . wait, what are you doing with your water glass?
(splash)
Is it something I said?