Critical Muslim Issue 57

  • DATE

    28 May 2026

  • TIME

    6:30 pm to 8:00 pm

  • AGES

    All ages welcome

  • PRICE

    £4

  • VENUE

    Blackwell's Bookshop Manchester
    University Green, 146 Oxford Rd, Manchester, M13 9GP

  • TICKET INFO

    Book tickets

  • THEME

    History

    Publishing

    Read

  • ORGANISER

    Blackwell's Bookshop

We are delighted to welcome the editor and contributors to the Critical Muslim journal to Blackwell’s in partnership with Vellum Press, a local, Manchester-based publishing house working on Academic projects, to celebrate the publication of Issue 57: Fire.

The authors will read from and discuss their work. The event will be chaired by CM editor Dr Shamim Miah.

Doors: 6.30pm, Start: 6.45pm

Tickets are £4 or admission is free when purchasing a Magazine & Ticket option.

About Critical Muslim:

A quarterly publication of ideas and issues showcasing groundbreaking thinking on Islam and what it means to be a Muslim in a rapidly changing, interconnected world. Each edition centres on a discrete theme, and contributions include reportage, academic analysis, cultural commentary, photography, poetry, and book reviews.

About the issue:

Humanity shares an intimate history with fire. It appears in arts and language predating civilisation, often seen as its origin point. From Prometheus’s theft and Hawaii’s volcano goddess Pele to the smokeless flames that created djinns in pre-Islamic tales, where we see humanity, we see fire. It can be a source of creation and a source of destruction. Necessary, but uncontained-troublesome indeed. Revealer, for better or worse. Fire features in a variety of religious practices, often as a metaphor for divine intervention, especially in the Abrahamic religions. Today, however, fire seems to be the element of the age-from the scorching words and red-hot extreme opinions of our public debates, to the climate change-fuelled flames that now regularly engulf entire continents. We seem upon the precipice of ultimate irony: born by flame, to perish by flame. But must the tale of humanity and fire end in a terminal ash heap? This issue of Critical Muslim investigates.