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Black Mecca : The African Muslims of Harlem
Black Mecca : The African Muslims of Harlem
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Author(s): Abdullah, Zain
ISBN No.: 9780195314250
Pages: 320
Year: 202101
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 57.92
Status: Out Of Print

"Black Mecca is a masterful example of thick ethnography. Combines great storytelling with deep insights. a must read for students of American Islam." --Islamic Africa "Black Mecca is an immensely readable book that is a must for those with a keen interest in religion and culture. Zain Abdulllah''s tenacity, tact, and knowledge of Islam open up the world and lives of individuals and communities who are creating a space for themselves in a new country."--Black Theology "Brilliantly subtle. does a masterful job humanizing these subjects and rendering their lives and thoughts in nuanced and memorable ways."--Sociology of Religion "Compelling and readable.


Abdullah is a skilled writer, and the reader moves from one inviting chapter to the next as if wandering through the city with a close friend, stopping to chat with passersby. A thoughtful analysis of how African Muslims have become a vital part of Harlem social life."--American Anthropologist "Intermingling ethnographic research with good storytelling and captivating interviews, Black Mecca is electrifying. Abdullah opens up the community and its individuals in ways I could not have imagined. We visit their homes, dine with them, and stay up late into the night at celebrations. We become intimate with longing, tragedy, uncertainty, loss, and triumph. This is a must-read for students of immigration, anthropology, religion, and culture." --Aminah Beverly McCloud, Director, Islamic World Studies, DePaul University "Skillfully combining engaging narrative with insightful analysis, Zain Abdullah has given us a revelatory book, Black Mecca, which tells the compelling story of African Muslims in New York City.


In Black Mecca the voices of African Americans and African Muslims are loud, clear, and passionate. Abdullah chronicles the recent evolution of social life in Harlem, a fluid multicultural urban scene in which the proximity of African Muslims and African Americans has triggered both broad cross-cultural awareness and profound cultural misunderstanding, both bonding and resentment. By capturing this ever-changing complexity, Black Mecca makes a major contribution to urban and religious studies, and powerfully illuminates the nuances of social and religious life in contemporary urban America." --Paul Stoller, author of Money Has No Smell: The Africanization of New York City "Zain Abdullah''s Black Mecca is an innovative, first-rate ethnography. Its engaging narrative allows African Muslim immigrants in Harlem to speak for themselves, enabling readers to understand the nature and richness of their experience. Abdullah''s writing style is accessible, and his analysis is both critical and sophisticated. At a time when Muslim Americans have come under scrutiny, Black Mecca offers a well-rounded argument for the significant contributions they make to American public life." --Jacob K.


Olupona, Professor of African Religious Traditions, Harvard Divinity School "Situated at the intersection of race studies, anthropology, and Islamic studies, this book is significant beyond its role as a study of American Muslims in advancing readers'' understanding of migration, religious identities, and globalization through the lives of people in this particular community. Highly recommended."--CHOICE "One of the greatest strengths of Black Mecca is the careful attention Abdullah pays to relationships between African Muslim and African Americans in Harlem.Abdullah is one of the rare academic writers who can present a sophisticated analysis in a highly engaging manner."--Erin E. Stiles, University of Nevada, Reno "Abdullah weaves these topics into a dense and vivid portrait of what he descibes as a new ''Blues people'' immersed in narratives of suffering, survival, and hope. He skillfully avoids one-sided representations and allows himself to consider different angles for each encounter he describes. The book is significant.


advancing our understanding of migration through the lives of people in this particular community."-- Carolyn Wilcox, CHOICE "I salute D. Abdullah''s effort to identify a very visable community in Harlem with poise and respect in authoring ''Black Mecca''.It''s truly a superb and scholarly gem. I enjoyed reading, and suggest that you do also, and tha''s ''As I See It."--Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, The Chronicle "This book is a muct read for individuals seeking to understand how immigrants deal with struggles as group, and also as a mean of understnading the tension that occurs in communities where immigrants have begun to transform the cultural space.


"--Adilah S. Muhammad, Last Prophet ".this book is significant beyond its role as a study of American Muslims in advancing readers''.highly recommended."--CHOICE "This approach reveals theor longsing, tragedies, uncertainties, losses , and triumphs, as well as the significant contributions they have (and continue to) made America''s public life."Islamic Horizons "Zain Abdullah aims to create a voice with his book."--Priscilla Ward, The Temple News "Black Mecca is, above all, a story of unity."--Diego Ortiz, The Rutger Observer ".


brillant subtle book."--John L. Jackson Jr., University of Pennsylvania "[Abdullah] does a masterful job humanizing these subjects and rendering their lives and thoughts in nuanced memorable ways."--Sociology of Religion "[N]oteworthy is [Abdullah''s] investigation of courtship, marriage, and family formation for the roles that these processes play in relationships within Harlem''s West African community and beyond it."--Social Service Review "Abdullah''s monograph presents a compelling exploration of the experiences of West African Muslim immigrants in Harlem.Abdullah''s organization provides a straightforward framework for exploring the various ways in which immigrants experience, adapt to, and influence Harlem."--The Journal of African American History "Black Mecca undoubtedly is a new contribution to the literature on Islam in America.


Black Mecca is a must-read book for any scholar dealing with issues, roles, and the contributions of Muslim immigrants in the United States."--The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences "Zain Abdullah''s Black Mecca: The African Muslims of Harlem is a fine example of a high-quality ethnography and fieldwork. It is rare for an academic book to be written in such a way that it keeps its reader''s attention through the whole volume, but Abdullah''s descriptions and analyses comes close to an academic cliff-hanger, and his engagement and knowledge are intriguing and stimulating.a book one must read. Moreover, it can also be read as a manual for how to write an ethnography and conduct fieldwork, a skill that is very hard to learn. From these points of view, Abdullah''s fine work is a true inspiration and a joy to read."--Alternative Spirituality and Religion Review "This book is a wonderful teaching tool at undergraduate and graduate levels. Not only does it introduce its audience to relatively new scholarly subjects, African and African-American Islam, but also it evocatively and clearly describes immigrant experiences by tacking between detailed ethnography and concise summaries of broader theoretical and theological discussions.


"--Journal of Islamic Law and Culture "A compelling exploration of the experiences of West African Muslim immigrants in Harlem.Abdullah''s topical organization provides a straightforward framework for exploring the various ways in which immigrants experience, adapt to, and influence Harlem."--The Journal of African American History.


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