Arab Detroit: From Margin to Mainstream

Front Cover
Nabeel Abraham, Andrew Shryock
Wayne State University Press, 2000 - Biography & Autobiography - 629 pages

In this volume, Nabeel Abraham and Andrew Shryock bring together the work of twenty-five contributors to create a richly detailed portrait of Arab Detroit.

Metropolitan Detroit is home to one of the largest, most diverse Arab communities outside the Middle East, yet the complex world Arabic-speaking immigrants have created there is barely visible on the landscape of ethnic America. In this volume, Nabeel Abraham and Andrew Shryock bring together the work of twenty-five contributors to create a richly detailed portrait of Arab Detroit. The book goes behind the bulletproof glass in Iraqi Chaldean liquor stores. It explores the role of women in a Sunni mosque and the place of nationalist politics in a Coptic church. It follows the careers of wedding singers, Arabic calligraphers, restaurant owners, and pastry chefs. It examines the agendas of Shia Muslim activists and Washington-based lobbyists and looks at the intimate politics of marriage, family honor, and adolescent rebellion. Memoirs and poems by Lebanese, Chaldean, Yemeni, and Palestinian writers anchor the book in personal experience, while over fifty photographs provide a backdrop of vivid, often unexpected, images. In their efforts to represent an ethnic/immigrant community that is flourishing on the margins of pluralist discourse, the contributors to this book break new ground in the study of identity politics, transnationalism, and diaspora cultures.

 

Contents

IV
39
V
45
VI
49
VII
61
VIII
95
IX
99
X
101
XI
103
XXIV
319
XXV
321
XXVI
343
XXVII
373
XXVIII
377
XXIX
381
XXX
391
XXXI
401

XII
107
XIII
149
XIV
151
XV
179
XVI
181
XVII
199
XVIII
203
XIX
205
XX
219
XXI
241
XXII
279
XXIII
313
XXXII
425
XXXIII
463
XXXIV
471
XXXV
483
XXXVI
487
XXXVII
515
XXXVIII
551
XXXIX
573
XL
611
XLI
613
Copyright

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