African American Muslim Women: An Invisible Group

被引:0
作者
Karen Fraser Wyche
机构
[1] University of Miami,Department of Psychology
来源
Sex Roles | 2004年 / 51卷
关键词
african american muslim women; minority women and islam;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Little is written about Islam and African American women or men from a psychosocial perspective. Most of the literature is on the historical and political development of the Nation of Islam, and the differences among the male leaders. This focus obscures the fact that the majority of African Americans Muslims belong to traditional Islamic groups. Drawing upon a variety of literatures, this paper seeks to explore some background information about Islam and the African American community, and to understand the appeal of Islam to African American women.
引用
收藏
页码:319 / 328
页数:9
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] Allen E.(1996)Religious heterodoxy and nationalist traditions: The continuing evolution of the Nation of Islam. The Black Scholar 26 2-34
  • [2] Al-Romi N. H.(2000)Muslims as a minority in the United States. International Journal of Educational Research 33 631-638
  • [3] Badran M.(2001)Understanding Islam, Islamism, and Islamic feminism. Journal of Women's History 13 47-52
  • [4] Bellinger L.(2002)A new Farrakhan? Sojourners 31 16-17
  • [5] Chatters L.(1999)African American religious participation: A multi-sample comparison. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 38 132-146
  • [6] Taylor R.(1996)What's in a name? Womanism, black feminism, and beyond. The Black Scholar 26 1-10
  • [7] Lincoln K.(2002)Islamizing the black body: Ritual and power in Elijah Muhammad's Nation of Islam. Religion and American Culture '2 167-197
  • [8] Collins P. H.(1994)Business reports: Religion: Understanding Islam in America. America Demographics 16 10-11
  • [9] Curtis E. E.(1995)There is a balm in Gilead: Black women and the black church as agents of a therapeutic community. Women and Therapy 16 55-71
  • [10] El-Badry S.(2002)Challenging myths of Muslim women: The influence of Islam on Arab-American women's labor force activity. Muslim World 92 1-14