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Five Classic Muslim Slave Narratives (American Islamic Heritage)

Author Muhammad A Al-Ahari, Omar ibn Said, Abu Bakr Sadiq, Selim Aga, Nicholas Said, Job ben Sulaiman
Publisher CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
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Book Details
ISBN / ASIN1463593279
ISBN-139781463593278
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,150,340
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

The presentation of Africa, Islam and slavery in the American slave Narratives of Muslim slaves in the Americas is a topic that is often overlooked in discussing the genre of slave narratives and the birth of African American Literature. In fact the first biography was that of a former Maryland slave, Job Ben Solomon, published in 1730 in Britain. By reexamining these often overlooked narratives we can get insight into African Islam, the turmoil of integration into a foreign culture, life in Africa, and life as a slave in the Americas. The primary sources include: the narrative of Job ben Solomon, the two autobiographical pieces of Muhammad Said of Bornu, the Arabic autobiography of 'Umar ibn Said, the Jamaican narrative of Abu Bakr Said, a discussion of coverage on Bilali Muhammad's excerpts from the Risalah of Abi Zaid, Theodore Dwight's articles on the teaching methods of the Serachule teacher slave Lamen Kebe, and a letter describing Salih Bilali.