Tip

Moving the mouse cursor over the top of the page will display the menu bar.

Through layers of legislation, political movements, wars, key events, and shifting migration patterns, my map uncovers how ‘the immigrant’ became synonymous with ‘the Muslim’ in Danish politics starting from the 1960s—tracing the contours of exclusion as they were drawn, redrawn, and hardened over time. To the right, it is traced how the anti-Muslim discourse paved the way for the legitimisation of demolishing multiple racialised neighbourhoods across Denmark and thereby displacing large groups of racialised individuals. The cartoons work to show questions, discomforts, and realisations that emerged as I confronted urban racism in Denmark through a white lens.

Tip

This page contains media that is intended to start playback automatically on opening. This may include sound. Your browser is blocking automated playback. Please click here to start media.

  • contents
    • I. Background of the practice
    • II. Why We Map
    • III. Positionality
    • IV. Terminology thoughts
    • V. Mapping the Shift: From Anti-Immigration to Anti-Islam Discourse
    • [VI. ZoomedOutMap]
    • Isa Thulin
  • navigation
    overview
  • abstract
    Through layers of legislation, political movements, wars, key events, and shifting migration patterns, my map uncovers how ‘the immigrant’ became synonymous with ‘the Muslim’ in Danish politics starting from the 1960s—tracing the contours of exclusion as they were drawn, redrawn, and hardened over time. To the right, it is traced how the anti-Muslim discourse paved the way for the legitimisation of demolishing multiple racialised neighbourhoods across Denmark and thereby displacing large groups of racialised individuals. The cartoons work to show questions, discomforts, and realisations that emerged as I confronted urban racism in Denmark through a white lens.
  • Isa Thulin - Mapping the Shift: From Anti-Immigration to Anti-Islam Discourse - 2025
  • Meta
  • Comments
  • Terms