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Musa al-Gharbi

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Musa al-Gharbi
OccupationAssistant professor of sociology
Academic background
EducationCochise Community College (AA; 2009)
University of Arizona (BA; 2012) (MA; 2013)
Columbia University (MA; 2017) (PhD; 2023)[1]
Alma materColumbia University
Academic work
DisciplineSociologist
InstitutionsStony Brook University

Musa al-Gharbi is an American sociologist. He is an assistant professor in the School of Communication and Journalism at Stony Brook University. He was the communications director of Heterodox Academy from 2016 to 2020.[2]

Early life and education

Al-Gharbi grew up in southern Arizona in a military family. He had a twin brother who in 2010 was killed in Afghanistan.[3]

Al-Gharbi received an associate degree from Cochise Community College, then going on to receive a bachelor's degree in Near Eastern studies and a MA in philosophy at the University of Arizona.[4] He graduated from Columbia University, earning a PhD in sociology in 2023.[4]

Career

In 2014, while teaching at the University of Arizona, al-Gharbi became a target of right-wing backlash after Fox News highlighted a Truthout article he wrote that criticized American policy in the Middle East and stated that “It would not be a stretch to say that the United States is actually a greater threat to peace and stability in the [Middle East] than ISIS.”[2][5][6] Following this, he was denied entry into the university's sociology doctoral program, apparently due to political reasons.[3]

In 2023, he became an assistant professor in the School of Communication and Journalism at Stony Brook University.[7]

Since the election of Donald Trump in 2016, al-Gharbi has argued that mainstream liberal news outlets including the The New York Times opinion page and MSNBC have mischaracterized his supporters.[2]

We Have Never Been Woke

In 2021, his book We Have Never Been Woke: Social Justice Discourse, Inequality, and the Rise of a New Elite, was acquired by Princeton University Press.[8] We Have Never Been Woke was published in 2024.[9] Al-Gharbi argues in the book that the contemporary “woke” movement had not begun during the mid 2010s matriculation of Generation Z into college, but in 2011 during a surge in media discussions of various forms of prejudice and discrimination.[10]

Selected works

Books

  • al-Gharbi, Musa (2024). We Have Never Been Woke: The Cultural Contradictions of a New Elite. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691232607.

Articles

References