Bültmann & Gerriets
An Imagined Geography
Sierra Leonean Muslims in America
von Joann D'Alisera
Verlag: Penguin Random House South Africa
Reihe: Contemporary Ethnography
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ISBN: 978-0-8122-0172-7
Erschienen am 19.04.2013
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 192 Seiten

Preis: 30,49 €

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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Notes on Transliteration
Chapter 1: Multiple Sites/Virtual Sitings: Ethnography in Transnational Contexts
Chapter 2: Field of Dreams: The Anthropologist Far Away at Home
Chapter 3: Icons of Longing: Homeland and Memory
Chapter 4: Spiritual Centers, Peripheral Identities: On the Sacred Border of American Islam
Chapter 5: I ? Islam: Popular Religious Commodities and Sites of Inscription
Chapter 6: Mapping Women's Displacement and Difference
Chapter 7: "We owe our children the pride": The Imagined Geography of a Muslim Homeland
Notes
References Cited
Index
Acknowledgments



For more than a decade a vicious civil war has torn the fabric of society in the West African country of Sierra Leone, forcing thousands to flee their homes for refugee camps and others to seek peace and asylum abroad. Sierra Leoneans have established new communities around the world, in London, Paris, New York, Washington, D.C., and elsewhere. Yet despite the great geographic range of this diaspora and the diverse ethnic backgrounds among Sierra Leoneans settled in the same communities abroad, these Africans have come to understand and express their shared identity through religious rituals, social engagements, and material culture.
In An Imagined Geography, anthropologist JoAnn D'Alisera demonstrates persuasively that the long-held anthropological paradigms of separate, bounded, and unique communities, geographically located and neatly localized, must be reconsidered. Studying Sierra Leonean Muslims living in greater Washington, D.C., she shows how these immigrants maintain intense and genuine community ties through weddings, rituals, and travel, across both vast urban spaces and national boundaries. D'Alisera examines two primary issues: Sierra Leoneans' engagement with their homeland, to which they frequently traveled and often sent their children for upbringing until the outbreak of the civil war; and the Sierra Leonean interaction with a diverse, multicultural, increasingly global Muslim community that is undergoing its own search for identity.
Sierra Leoneans in America, D'Alisera observes, express a longing for home and the pain of disconnection in powerful narratives about their country and about their own displacement. At the same time, however, self and communal identity are shaped by a pressing need to affiliate in their adopted country with Sierra Leoneans of all ethnic and religious backgrounds and with fellow Muslims from other parts of the world, a process that is played out against the complex social field of the American urban landscape.


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