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| Subjects: Cultural Studies, Anthropology, American Studies |
| Part of the Nation of Newcomers Series |
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Arab Americans are one of the most misunderstood segments of the U.S. population, especially after the events of 9/11. In Arab America, Nadine Naber tells the stories of second generation Arab American young adults living in the San Francisco Bay Area, most of whom are political activists engaged in two culturalist movements that draw on the conditions of diaspora, a Muslim global justice and a Leftist Arab movement.
Writing from a transnational feminist perspective, Naber reveals the complex and at times contradictory cultural and political processes through which Arabness is forged in the contemporary United States, and explores the apparently intra-communal cultural concepts of religion, family, gender, and sexuality as the battleground on which Arab American young adults and the looming world of America all wrangle. As this struggle continues, these young adults reject Orientalist thought, producing counter-narratives that open up new possibilities for transcending the limitations of Orientalist, imperialist, and conventional nationalist articulations of self, possibilities that ground concepts of religion, family, gender, and sexuality in some of the most urgent issues of our times: immigration politics, racial justice struggles, and U.S. militarism and war.
For more, check out the author-run Facebook page for Arab America.
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Nadine Naber is Associate Professor in the Program in American Culture and the Department of Women’s Studies and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She is co-editor of Race and Arab Americans (2007) and Arab and Arab American Feminisms (2011). View all books by Nadine Naber |
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| | “Arab America is a vital intervention in the growing field of Arab-American studies. At once an historical overview and an ethnographic study, it portrays a complex picture of activism as it negotiates Arabness in America. Organized around the tensions entailed in living on the hyphen of ‘Arab-American’ identity, the text insightfully highlights the dilemmas of a diaspora in an empire deeply embedded in the Middle East. Naber perceptively engages the feminist call for intersectionality in ways that are productive, dynamic and fresh.” | | -Ella Shohat, author of Taboo Memories, Diasporic Voices |
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