Description
Book SynopsisInvestigates the meaning of American citizenship and the place of Islam in a global age.
Trade ReviewA moving and incisive account of Muslim immigrant experiences in the United States.It reveals a dimension of American life seldom genuinely understood.No one will think of American Islam in the same way after reading this book. -- Saba Mahmood,author of Politics of Piety
A powerful, lyrical, and boldly rendered book, bringing to life the journey of knowledge seekers. Grewal decenters, blurs, and puts back together a number of scholarly fields to tell a story of Muslims traveling the world for an Islamic education. This profound and compelling ethnography shows that amidst all of the talk of radicalism and terrorism, there is a far more human endeavor herethe search for ethical truths and a better world, no matter how messy and contradictory. -- Junaid Rana,author of Terrifying Muslims: Race and Labor in the South Asian Diaspora
Energetic and insightful, critical as well as empathetic, Grewal provides a rich map of the discursive counterpoints between different geographies of imagination as they are mapped and remapped in the lives and bodies of men and women who translate Islam in their lived practices today. A must read for anyone wishing to understand how religious knowledge in Islam is manufactured in a readable as well as enjoyable manner. -- Ebrahim Moosa,Professor of Religion & Islamic Studies, Duke University
Grewal provides readers with useful information about the media, educational organizations, and institutions of political and moral authority. * CHOICE *
[] Grewals innovative focus on student travelers makes for a fascinating andinsightful look at U.S. Muslims today. The distinctive subject matter and accessiblewriting style will attract readers outside anthropology and beyond academia, andthrough considering debates about authority and authenticity in the search for Islamicknowledge, Grewal engages with an area of great interest in the anthropology of Islam. * American Anthropologist *
Grewal's book is beautifully written, with textured ethnographic vignettes and a clear theoretical analysis. * American Journal of Islamic Social Science *
This book provides a window into Muslim American debates around religious authority and identity. Its vast subject matter, timeliness, and fluidity are sure to leave readers wanting more; not in the sense of having been deprived, but out of a desire to explore the expansive subject that Grewal has opened up for us.This book is a valuable contribution to the study of Muslim Americans and will be of great interest to scholars of Islam and Americanists alike. * Journal of the American Academy of Religion *
A genuinely fascinating and thought-provoking book. * Times Literary Supplement *
[T]his book offers some original social history of the Muslim community in America and particularly the unique role of the African-American influence of shaping American Islam. [Grewal]skillfully weaves together her ethnographic accounts, staying loyal to her anthropological training but pulling in American history, Middle Eastern Studies, classical Islamic texts, as well as considerations of race, ethnicity, and gender. * Sociology of Islam *
Zareena GrewalsIslam Is a Foreign Countryoffers a valuable contribution to the growing body of scholarship on American Islam by illuminating the motivations and pedagogies of American Muslims who seek Islamic knowledge overseas in Egypt, Jordan, and Syria. * Sociology of Religion *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: Unmapping the Muslim World Part I: The Roots and Routes of Islam in America 1 Islam Is a Foreign Country: Mapping the Global Crisis of Authority 2 Islamic Utopias, American Dystopia: Muslim Moral Geographies after the Great Migration 3 Imaginary Homelands, American Dreams: Sunni Moral Geographies after 1965 Part II: Tradition Bound 4 Retrieving Tradition: Pedagogical Forms and Secular Reforms 5 Choosing Tradition: Women Student-Travelers between Resistance and Submission 6 Transmitting Tradition: The Constraints of Crisis 7 Muslim Reformers and the American Media: The Exceptional Umma and Its Emergent Moral Geography Epilogue: American Muslims and the Place of Dissent Notes IndexAbout the Author