Black Routes to Islam

"Erudite yet easy to read, these timely and stimulating essays cover a wide variety of fascinating topics. They revealingly map the unique and intriguing landscape of Islam among contemporary African-Americans. Along the pages, with the help of music, history, linguistics, sociology and several...

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Bibliographic Details
Group Author: Marable, Manning, 1950-; Aidi, Hishaam D.
Published:
Literature type: Electronic Software eBook
Language: English
Series: Critical black studies
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230623743
Summary: "Erudite yet easy to read, these timely and stimulating essays cover a wide variety of fascinating topics. They revealingly map the unique and intriguing landscape of Islam among contemporary African-Americans. Along the pages, with the help of music, history, linguistics, sociology and several other disciplines, their community, one of the least understood in the country, comes to life in all its striking complexity and diversity." - Sylviane A. Diouf, author of Servants of Allah: African Muslims Enslaved in the Americas "This impressive and sweeping collection of essays examines the hidden history of the 'Muslim presence' in North America that began with the enslavement of significant numbers of Muslim Africans. It shows how the development of US racial categories and hierarchies has long been suffused with assumptions about the Muslim world. And, it powerfully suggests the historical centrality of Islamic discourse and practice to the sense of common oppression and linked fate central to the emergence of modern black freedom struggles." - Nikhil Pal Singh, Associate Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis and History, New York University "This exceedingly well-written and thoughtful collection of articles and essays simultaneously illuminates as it transforms such critically important fields as Black Studies and Islamic Studies. The bold themes of this book are as expansive as the breadth of its geography, ranging as it does from Harlem, Black Chicago and Watts to Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Iran. Still, the ultimate value of this quite insightful book may be the bright light it shines on how the U.S. - and, indeed, the entire international community - grapples with what may be the most important issue of this century: how to engage Islam and the Muslim world." - Gerald Horne, author of' The End of Empires: African-Americans and India "This collection brings together some of the best and most innovative scholars in the country, writing essays that are engaged, intellectually rigorous, and a pleasure to read. Black Routes to Islam is really about the broad canvas of American relationships to the Middle East - with religion, race, and politics at the heart of the story. It tells a transnational history we need to know, and then brings that history into our current moment, showing how 'war on terror' has come to American Muslim communities. This is a wonderful, timely, politically powerful book." - Melani McAlister is an Associate Professor of American Studies and International Affairs at George Washington University.
Item Description: Ebook.
Originally published in: 2009.
Carrier Form: 336 p.
ISBN: 9781403984005
9780230623743 :
0230623743 :
CLC: B96
Contents: Introduction: Captives and Narratives * PART I: Geographies and the Political Imagination * Locating Palestine in the African American Imagination * Black Orientalism * Islamism and Its African American Muslim Critics * East of the Sun (West of the Moon) * Representing Permanent War * PART II: Solidarity and Resistance * 'Every brother on a rooftop can quote Fanon" * Let Us Be Moors * Constructing Masculinity * Through Sunni Women's Eyes * Black Arabic * Lights, Camera, Suspension * Protect Ya Neck * PART III: Urban Encounters * Overlapping Diasporas, Multiracial Lives * African 'Soul Brothers' in the 'Hood * The BlackStone Legacy * Jihadis in the Hood * PART IV: Conclusion * Rediscovering Malcolm's Life * About the Authors.