Making Muslim Space in North America and Europe |
Preface and Acknowledgments |
Toward Islamic English? |
Introduction |
1. Making a Space for Everyday Ritual and Practice |
1. Muslim Space and the Practice of Architecture |
2. Transcending Space |
3. “This Is a Muslim Home” |
4. “Refuge” and “Prison” |
5. Making Room versus Creating Space |
6. New Medinas |
2. Claiming Space in the Larger Community |
7. Island in a Sea of Ignorance |
8. A Place of Their Own |
• | Demography, Zoning, and Square Meters |
• | Landscapes of Kreuzberg: the Structural, the Social Structural, and the Antisocial |
• | Little Istanbul |
• | Gurbet: Cinema and Exile |
• | Expressions of Islam Abroad: Alevis and Sunnis |
• | Head Scarves and Alevis |
• | Alevis and Sunnis: Separate Spaces in a Shared World |
• | From Ritual to Revolution |
• | Conclusion: Toponomy, Almanyali, and New Identities |
• | Notes |
• | Works Cited |
9. Stamping the Earth with the Name of Allah |
10. Karbala as Sacred Space among North American Shi‘a |
11. The Muslim World Day Parade and “Storefront” Mosques of New York City |
12. Nationalism, Community, and the Islamization of Space in London |
13. Engendering Muslim Identities |
Notes on Contributors |