Drawing on 26 months of fieldwork in a Yemeni community in south-eastern Michigan, Loukia K. Sarroub tells the story of six Yemeni–American girls as they try to pick a pathway between the conflicting cultural values of home and school. The six ijbt, as she calls them, are the daughters of immigrants who came to the US in the 1970s but who have retained a high level of cultural attachment to their parents’ country of origin. They are all teenagers, all students at public schools, all subject to the complex marginalization processes of religion, ethnicity, gender, family, culture, nationality, schooling and socio-economic status, and yet all are presented as negotiating their home and school identities in unique and creative ways. Sarroub is ...
Review of Muslim Women in Britain: De-Mystifying the Muslimah by Sariya Contractor (London: Routledg...
Drawing on her award-winning research, Dr. Loukia K. Sarroub explains how teachers can help displace...
Yemeni migration to the United States is part of a larger historical trend of Arab immigration to No...
This review examines the work of Liz Jackson in her study of the ways Muslims and Islam are treated ...
BOOK REVIEW: Mir, S. (2014). Muslim American Women on Campus: Undergraduate Social Life and Identity...
Suleiman, M., & Abu-Lughod, R. (2014). In spite of being white: The plight of Arab Americans. ...
Review of Our Stories, Our Lives: Inspiring Muslim Women’s Voices, edited by Wahida Sahff
Review of Questioning the ‘Muslim Woman’: Identity and Insecurity in an Urban Indian Locality, by Ni...
Review of an unfocused collection of papers on the educational practice in some areas of "the Muslim...
Review of Racialized Bodies, Disabling Worlds: Storied Lives of Immigrant Muslim Women by Parin Doss
Islam in Urban America: Sunni Muslims in Chicago is a well-researched, carefully nuanced, and timely...
Arab-American Faces and Voices: The Origins of an Immigrant Community offers a detailed history of t...
Review of Liberating Shahrazad: Feminism, Postcolonialism, and Islam by Suzanne Gauc
With a provocative title that inherently questions who might be served and educated best by the bran...
Being German, Becoming Muslim is the result of the author, Esra Özyürek’s research on converts to Is...
Review of Muslim Women in Britain: De-Mystifying the Muslimah by Sariya Contractor (London: Routledg...
Drawing on her award-winning research, Dr. Loukia K. Sarroub explains how teachers can help displace...
Yemeni migration to the United States is part of a larger historical trend of Arab immigration to No...
This review examines the work of Liz Jackson in her study of the ways Muslims and Islam are treated ...
BOOK REVIEW: Mir, S. (2014). Muslim American Women on Campus: Undergraduate Social Life and Identity...
Suleiman, M., & Abu-Lughod, R. (2014). In spite of being white: The plight of Arab Americans. ...
Review of Our Stories, Our Lives: Inspiring Muslim Women’s Voices, edited by Wahida Sahff
Review of Questioning the ‘Muslim Woman’: Identity and Insecurity in an Urban Indian Locality, by Ni...
Review of an unfocused collection of papers on the educational practice in some areas of "the Muslim...
Review of Racialized Bodies, Disabling Worlds: Storied Lives of Immigrant Muslim Women by Parin Doss
Islam in Urban America: Sunni Muslims in Chicago is a well-researched, carefully nuanced, and timely...
Arab-American Faces and Voices: The Origins of an Immigrant Community offers a detailed history of t...
Review of Liberating Shahrazad: Feminism, Postcolonialism, and Islam by Suzanne Gauc
With a provocative title that inherently questions who might be served and educated best by the bran...
Being German, Becoming Muslim is the result of the author, Esra Özyürek’s research on converts to Is...
Review of Muslim Women in Britain: De-Mystifying the Muslimah by Sariya Contractor (London: Routledg...
Drawing on her award-winning research, Dr. Loukia K. Sarroub explains how teachers can help displace...
Yemeni migration to the United States is part of a larger historical trend of Arab immigration to No...