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Muslims of Metropolis
Bookstore | Seasonal Catalog Book Listings | Spring and Summer 2008 Catalog | Muslims of Metropolis

Muslims of Metropolis
Muslims of Metropolis

Price: $25.95 

Subtitle:
The Stories of Three Immigrant Families in the West
Author: Kavitha Rajagopalan
Subject: Public Policy, Cultural Studies
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8135-4344-4
Pages: 288 pages
Publication Date: August 2008

Praise for Muslims of Metropolis

“Her book is well-written, compelling, and of broad interest, and does a wonderful job of following the journeys of three families as each leaves a majority-Muslim country and moves to a Western one."
-John Bowen, Dunbar-Van Cleve Professor in Arts & Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis


Description:

The Muslim population globally is comprised of hundreds of ethnic, linguistic, and religious sub-communities. Yet, more often than not, the public conflates these diverse and unrelated communities, branding Muslim immigrants as a single, suspicious, and culturally antagonistic group of people. Generalizations like these have compromised many Muslim immigrants' sense of belonging and acceptance in places where they have lived, in some cases, for three or four generations.

In Muslims of Metropolis, Kavitha Rajagopalan takes a much needed step in personalizing and humanizing our understanding of the Muslim diaspora. Tracing the stories of three very different families-a Palestinian family moving to London, a Kurdish family moving to Berlin, and a Bangladeshi family moving to New York-she reveals a level of complexity and nuance that is seldom considered. Through their voices and in their words, Rajagopalan describes what prompted these families to leave home, what challenges they faced in adjusting to their new lives, and how they came to view their place in society. Interviews with community leaders, social justice organizations, and with academics and political experts in each of the countries add additional layers of insight to how broad political issues, like nationalist conflict, immigration reform, and antiterrorism strategies affect the lives of Muslims who have migrated in search of economic stability and personal happiness.

Although recent thinking about immigration policy in the United States and Europe emphasizes the importance of long-term integration, a global attitude that continues to sensationalize divisions between Muslim and other communities thwarts this possibility. Integration cannot occur with policy solutions alone-people must feel that they belong to a larger society. Whether read as simple stories or broader narratives, the voices in this revealing book are among the many speaking against generalization, prejudice, and fear that has so far surrounded Muslims living in the West.


About the Author:

Kavitha Rajagopalan has worked in international development and finance, and as a journalist in India, Germany, and the United States.

Visit Kavitha's website at http://kaviraj.typepad.com



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Price: $25.95 






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