Sale!

Bengali Harlem and the Lost Histories of South Asian America

SKU: RM3894594983Category: Tags: , , , ,
In Stock

$44.49

Purchase this product now and earn 44 Srm Points! Learn More
Buy Now
Share on:
The Storepaperoomates Retail Market » Catalog and Departments » Book » Bengali Harlem and the Lost Histories of South Asian America
Product Description

Author: Bald Vivek

Brand: Harvard University Press

Edition: Reprint

Number Of Pages: 320

Details: Review

“[Bald] has produced an engaging account of a largely untold wave of immigration: Muslims from British India who arrived in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.”―Sam Roberts, New York Times

“A revelatory book… Vivek Bald’s new book on Bengali migration tells a history that has been largely unknown.”―Mini Basu, CNN.com

“Bald’s meticulously researched Bengali Harlem is about Indian sailors who jumped ship on the eastern seaboard during the early twentieth century. These men became blue-collar workers and married African American and Latina women, and their lives suggest a heterogeneity and hopefulness in the immigrant experience that is sometimes ignored.”―Hirsh Sawhney, Times Literary Supplement

“Captur[es] a unique narrative of inter-marriage and inter-ethnic community making in America.”―Yogendra Yadav, Indian Express

“Bengali Harlem and the Lost Histories of South Asian America is a landmark work at exhuming an unknown past of South Asian emigration… It deals in fascinating detail with the little-known narrative of Muslim men travelling from undivided Bengal from the 1880s onwards to seek a living in the U.S.”―Shamik Bag, Mint

“Bald opens readers’ eyes to a rarely depicted part of the U.S. melting pot.”―Richard Pretorius, The National

“A revelatory account of how the first Bengali migrants quietly merged into America’s iconic neighbourhoods.”―Mohua Das, The Telegraph (Calcutta)

“Bald vividly recreates the history of South Asian migration to the U.S. from the 1880s through the 1960s. Drawing on ships’ logs, census records, marriage documents, local news items, the memoir of an Indian Communist refugee, and interviews with descendants, Bald reconstructs the stories of the Muslim silk peddlers who arrived in 1880s during the fin-de-siècle fascination for Orientalism; the seamen from colonial India who jumped ship at ports along the Eastern seaboard; and the Creole, African-American, and Puerto Rican women they married. Bald persuasively shows how these immigrants provide us with a ‘different picture of assimilation.’ Global labor migrants, they did not necessarily come seeking a better way of life, nor did they follow a path of upward mobility. In the cases of the silk peddlers who maintained ties to the subcontinent to obtain their goods, they forged extensive global networks yet also assimilated into black neighborhoods, building multiethnic families and communities at a time of exclusionary immigration laws against Asians. By the 1940s, those who stayed had followed the jobs, becoming auto or steel workers in the Midwest, storekeepers in the South, and hotdog vendors or restaurant workers in Manhattan, and, thanks to their wives, had quietly blended into neighborhoods such as Harlem, West Baltimore, Treme in New Orleans and Black Bottom in Detroit.”―Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Vivek Bald’s extraordinary account persuasively places these first Bengali migrants at the heart of our multiracial American experience. A virtuoso act of recovery.”―Junot Díaz, author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

“Vivek Bald’s work on this untold story is meticulously researched, movingly told, and absolutely timely.”―Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, author of An Aesthetic Education in the Era of Globalization

“Vivek Bald’s Bengali Harlem is a monumental achievement. It brings to life a slice of the U.S. population unknown to the history books: South Asian migrants who came into the United States between the 1890s and the 1940s, making their lives in between African American and migrant spaces. Elegantly assembled, the stories of these migrants and their families are fascinating and heart-rending.”―Vijay Prashad, author of Uncle Swami: South Asians in America Today

“Grounded in extraordinary research, Bengali Harlem reveals how South Asians became an integral part of black and Puerto Rican communities in the early years of the twentieth century. Historians of black life, culture, and commerce will never again be abl

Release Date: 23-03-2015

Package Dimensions: 25x231x363

Product Inquiry
You may be interested in
New Arrivals
Best Sellers
Expedited Order Processing
60-Day Free Returns
Fast and Tracked Shipping
Quality Guarantee
Replacement for GE Air Conditioner Remote Control YK4EB1 Works for AEQ12DPS1 AEQ12DQ AEQ12DQW1 AEQ25DP AEQ25DPL1 AEW05LP AEW05LPG1 AEW05LPL1 AEW05LPQ1 AEW05LPW1 AEW05LQ AEW05LQG1 | The Storepaperoomates Retail Market - Fast Affordable Shopping
Check out Now and ...
Get an Exclusive Additional 15% Off …
Exit Intent – Global | The Storepaperoomates Retail Market - Fast Affordable Shopping
Wait, Before we forget...
Get a sweet extra 15% Off Now...