Abstract
Abstract
In this article I take up David Scott's “heuristic of tradition” to examine Africa as tradition in African American Muslim identity. First, I explore the structure and narrative of claims made for and to Africa by U.S. African American Muslims. Second, I ask: When U.S. African American Muslims claim an Islamic African past, to whom are they speaking and to what ends? I contend that U.S. African American Muslims find themselves neither Muslim enough to be authoritative to non-Black Muslims nor Muslim enough to be representative of U.S. American Muslims in the U.S. American popular imagination. In this context, I also trace the genealogical claims to an Africa made through hip-hop to demonstrate how a sonic religious lineage recenters U.S. African American Muslims within the broader U.S. Muslim community. Thus, I argue that as tradition, Africa labors against the erasure of the U.S. African American Muslim as legitimately Muslim.
Publisher
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Subject
Religious studies,Anthropology,Cultural Studies
Cited by
12 articles.
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1. Codewords and Counterinsurgent Continuities;Medina by the Bay;2023-09-01
2. Roots, Routes, and Rhythms of Devotional Time;Medina by the Bay;2023-09-01
3. Medina by the Bay;Medina by the Bay;2023-09-01
4. Introduction;Medina by the Bay;2023-09-01
5. References;Medina by the Bay;2023-09-01