|
INTRODUCTION GLOSSARY I. THE NATION OF ISLAM AND ITS SUCCESSORS AFTER 1975: FROM MILLENARIAN PROTEST
TO TRANS-CONTINENTAL RELATIONSHIPS 1: TO ELIJAH MUHAMMAD'S DEATH IN 1975 The Black Muslims' Original Millenarianism
The Drive for a New Economy and a New Language under Elijah Muhammad Theological Adjustments up to 1975: the Emergence
of Warith ud-Deen Mohammed Arab World Attitudes to Black Muslims to 1975 2: POST-1975 BLACK MUSLIM MOVEMENTS
Relations with Other Faiths, especially Christianity,under Warith's Leadership Coalitionism: The Farrakhan Group's
Attitudes to Christianity 3: RESPONSES TO THE POST-1973 SOCIAL CRISIS The Muslim's Struggle Against Ghetto Decay,
Crime, and Black Lumpen Sub-Culture From Elijah's Rhetorical-Secessionism to Frank Integration 4: POST-1975 ATTITUDES
TO OVERSEAS MUSLIMS AND AFRICANS Black Muslim Attitudes to Israel and Middle Eastern Affairs The New NOI Starts to
Empathize with Powerless Whites in America The NOI and Overseas Islamists Cargoism Black Muslim Attitudes to Africa
Below the Sahara Farrakhan and Ghana: 1986 Africa in the 1990s 5: THE RISE OF FARRAKHAN: THE CHALLENGE FOR WARITH
1984: Farrakhan and the Jews Farrakhan and the East's Orthodox Islam Ongoing Millenarianism The Farrakhan-Warith
Contest to 1990 6: MATURE WARITHITE ISLAM Classical Muslims and the Modern West Jews' and Arabs' Ongoing Input
into African-American Identity
II. AFRICAN ISLAM IN THE EVOLUTION OF THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN NATION: FORMATION
AND DEVELOPMENT OF AMERICA'S MULTI-ETHNIC SOCIETY 1: ISLAM IN AMERICAN SLAVERY Power and Dialogue Jihad?
Integration? Syncretism or Dissimulation? Atoms from Islam Transmitted Down New Generations Post-1960 Reactions
to Slavery and Forced Assimilation The Evolving Critique of Christianity Original Languages and 20th-century Nationality
2: JEWISH PARTICIPATION IN SLAVERY AND SEGREGATION 3: THE ANGLO-AMERICANIZATION OF OTHER WHITES AND THE FORECLOSURE
OF MICRONATIONALISMS The Formation of the Ethnic Groups Ethnic Entry into the American Parliamentarist Political System
4: EARLY ELITE BLACK HISTORIOGRAPHY VIS--VIS ISLAM Christianity Marginalized Arabic Writings of Africans Recycled
Qualified Identification with the Wider Arabo-Islamic World Muslim Slave-Trade Palliated? The Long-Term Legacy
for Scholarship New Historiography Unites Diverse Black Classes and Groups Long-Term Patterns of Meaning
III.
THE DIFFICULT REBIRTH OF ISLAM AMONG AFRICAN-AMERICANS, 1900-1950 1: SOCIAL CHANGE AND THE BIRTH OF THE MOORS
The Social Crisis in Which Indigenous Islam Took Form African-American Relations with Jews in the Early Twentieth
Century 2: THE MOORISH SCIENCE TEMPLE OF AMERICA 3: THE GARVEYITE MOVEMENT AND ISLAM UNIA Interactions with Middle
Eastern Muslims The Garveyites' Responses to Muslim Insurrection Overseas Garvey and Zionism The Shifts and Opening
to Islam in Religion The Moors and Political Black Nationalism 4: THE MOORS EVOLVE Increased Awareness of Third
World Muslim Countries and Concepts Purist Rejection of Arab Authority in Islam 5: JEWISH-BLACK INTERACTION AND THE
EARLY NOI Black-Jewish Cultural Relations WASP and Jewish Distortion of African-American Culture Ameliorism by
Jews and Black American Self-Formation of Identity 6: THE NATION OF ISLAM
IV.THE HEYDAY OF ELIJAH: HIS
ARTICULATION OF IDEOLOGY IN THE 1960S AND 1970S 1: ELIJAH'S PERIOD CONTEXT The Emergence of Bourgeois Nationalism
Among African-Americans 2: NOI PROTEST RELIGION The Threat to White America Anti-Christianity Arabic and Islamic
Elements in the Hybrid, Composite Religion Monotheism Secession from Islam? 3: RESISTANCE AND ACCOMMODATION TO
WHITE AMERICA Attraction to Creativity by Whites Economic Affiliation to America? Parliamentarism, U.S. Institutions
Southern Background and Regionalism U.S. Prisons 4: THE IMPACT OF ARABS AND MIDDLE EAST ISLAMS Middle Easterners
and the Borders of World Black Community to 1975 The Patterns of Ideology and Discourse to 1975
V. ELIJAH
MUHAMMAD'S MUSLIMS IN A CHANGING AMERICA 1: THE NOI IN ECONOMIC MODERNIZATION OF BLACKS Class Status Shifts
Through Conversion Openings for Affiliating Neo-Bourgeois Muslims to America and Success 2: RISING ETHNIC TENSIONS
IN THE 1960S BETWEEN THE BLACKS AND THE JEWS Affinities Between Blacks and Jews The Blacks Struggle to Win Control
Over Their Education Economic Foci of Conflict The Failure and Waning of Jewish-American Liberalism Nation of Islam
Activists and Tensions of Black Ghettoes With Jews 3: THE WIDENING DIVERSITY OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN GROUPS The Black
Panthers Elijah Muhammad on the New Left and the Campus Revolts Elijah on the Factionalization of Blacks Muhammad
Speaks' Coverage of Internal America 4: POSSIBILITIES FOR RELATIONSHIP WITH THIRD WORLD PEOPLES Growing African-American
Cultural Attraction to Sub-Saharan Africa Attitudes to Arabs Among Americanist Integrationists and Secular Black Nationalists
5: NOI RELATIONS WITH THE ARAB, MUSLIM AND THIRD WORLDS Arabization and Islam's Macro-History Religion, Economics,
and the Non-White States The Israel-Palestine Struggle Arabs and Persians Wider Muslim World and Other Third World
Countries Relations with the Communist World Relations with Spanish-Speaking States and Hispanic Americans
VI.
THE RISE OF FARRAKHAN IN ELIJAH'S NOI 1: TENSIONS BETWEEN THE BLACKS AND THE JEWS OVER FOREIGN POLICY TO 1980
Andrew Young and the Shifts in African-American Relations with Jews, Israel and Arabs Young's Functions in African-American
Macro-Consciousness U.S. Foreign Policy and African-American Identity and Institutions-Building 2: THE FORMATION OF MINISTER
LOUIS FARRAKHAN WITHIN THE NATION OF ISLAM (1955-1980) African-American Culture and Mass Mobilization Farrakhan's
Evolution as Leader from Minister of a Mosque to Deputy of Elijah Farrakhan After Wallace Mohammed's Succession, 1975-1980
The Young Farrakhan and Jewish Culture and Groups 3: PERSPECTIVE: ISLAM AND U.S. BLACK IDENTITY TO 1980
VII.
FARRAKHAN'S CHANGING POST-1990 NATION OF ISLAM 1: RELIGIOUS THOUGHT AND CHANGE IN FARRAKHAN'S NEW NOI Toward
the Humanization of Leadership, and Self-Reflection Combating Envy as a Force for Political Fragmentation 2005: The
Quran and the Humanization of Leadership for a United Front of All Blacks Neo-Fardian Themes in Farrakhan's NOI NOI
Changes and Deepening Engagement with Middle Eastern Islam The Threat of Violence and Repression of the Religion 2:
THE MILLION MAN MARCH: INDUCTION INTO ELECTORAL POLITICS? The Million Man March of 1995 Political Mobilization after
the 1995 Million Man March Militants: Could the U.S. Systemic Disintegrate? 3: DISPARATE BLACK CLASSES AND GETTING RICH:
CAN THE NOI INTEGRATE HUMANE NATIONHOOD? The NOI and Nationalist Private Enterprise Farrakhan's NOI and the Black
Bourgeoisie's Economic Nationalism Strata and Classes Beyond the Bourgeoisie Tentative Incorporation into the System
The Transformation of NOI Pan-Islamism 4: AFTER SEPTEMBER 11, 2001 General Non-Muslim African-American Reactions
Non-Muslim Blacks: Al Sharpton The Impact of September 11 on Farrakhan and his Sect Movement towards a Median
Position between Arabs and Jews Abdul Akbar Muhammad: Pan-Islam The U.S. Invasion of Iraq What Future for Farrakhan’s
New NOI and Islam among African-Americans? 5: THE 2005 MILLIONS MORE MOVEMENT: RESURGENCE FOR FARRAKHAN? PERSPECTIVES
AND SOME CONCLUSIONS
|