|
Product Description
Winner of the Theodore Saloutos Memorial Book Award
Winner of the Association for Asian American Studies Book Award for History
A Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year
A Saveur “Essential Food Books That Define New York City” Selection
In the final years of the nineteenth century, small groups of Muslim peddlers arrived at Ellis Island every summer, bags heavy with embroidered silks from their home villages in Bengal. The American demand for “Oriental goods” took these migrants on a curious path, from New Jersey’s beach boardwalks into the heart of the segregated South. Two decades later, hundreds of Indian Muslim seamen began jumping ship in New York and Baltimore, escaping the engine rooms of British steamers to find less brutal work onshore. As factory owners sought their labor and anti-Asian immigration laws closed in around them, these men built clandestine networks that stretched from the northeastern waterfront across the industrial Midwest.
The stories of these early working-class migrants vividly contrast with our typical understanding of immigration. Vivek Bald’s meticulous reconstruction reveals a lost history of South Asian sojourning and life-making in the United States. At a time when Asian immigrants were vilified and criminalized, Bengali Muslims quietly became part of some of America’s most iconic neighborhoods of color, from Tremé in New Orleans to Detroit’s Black Bottom, from West Baltimore to Harlem. Many started families with Creole, Puerto Rican, and African American women.
As steel and auto workers in the Midwest, as traders in the South, and as halal hot dog vendors on 125th Street, these immigrants created lives as remarkable as they are unknown. Their stories of ingenuity and intermixture challenge assumptions about assimilation and reveal cross-racial affinities beneath the surface of early twentieth-century America.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- If They Come for Us: Poems
- The Making of Asian America: A History
- The Karma of Brown Folk
- Everybody Was Kung Fu Fighting: Afro-Asian Connections and the Myth of Cultural Purity
- The Common Wind: Afro-American Currents in the Age of the Haitian Revolution
- Season of Migration to the North (New York Review Books Classics)
- Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America - Updated Edition (Politics and Society in Modern America)
- Coolie Woman: The Odyssey of Indenture
- Making Ethnic Choices: California's Punjabi Mexican Americans (Asian American History & Cultu)
- The Sun Never Sets: South Asian Migrants in an Age of U.S. Power (NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis)
*If this is not the "Bengali Harlem and the Lost Histories of South Asian America" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Dec 22, 2024 01:25 +08.