Contents: Introduction. 1. Class, race and success: Indian-Americans confront the American dream/Johanna Lessinger. 2. Construction of identity in diaspora: emigrants from Hyderabad, India/Karen Leonard. 3. Multiple-migrants and multiple diasporas: cultural reproduction and transformations among British Punjabi women/Parminder Bhachu. 4. Hindu Gods in an American landscape: The Sri Siva-Vishnu Temple in Suburban Washington, DC/Joanne Punzo Waghorne. 5. Singing for the Sadguru: Tyagaraja festivals in North America/Kathryn Hansen. 6. Inter-Ethnic relations within the Ahmadiyya Muslim community in the United States/Linda S. Walbridge and Fatimah Haneef. 7. The [Re-] Construction of South Asian Muslim identity in Queens, New York/Usha Sanyal. 9. Intertwining religion and ethnicity: South Asian cultural performance in the diaspora/Carla Petievich. 9. Identity, kinship and community: Bangladeshis in the United States/Dorothy Angell. 10. The second generation speaks: a panel discussion/Ritu Birla, Gita Srinivasan, Farhad Karim, Saloni Mathur Chair and David Lelyveld. 11. East Indians in the diaspora: fragments for the second generation/Gita Srinivasan. Index.
"This volume presents a diverse range of scholarship which seeks to outline some of the cultural activities practiced by peoples of South Asian origin who live in other places. Literature on the South Asian diaspora has tended to cluster in two areas: the demographically-oriented work of the 1970s and 1980s; and more recent theoretical work from the 1990s, which has been developed within the framework of postcolonial studies. The essays in the present volume reflect research which does not ignore demographic and theoretical concerns but is primarily grounded in fieldwork, much of it ethnographic.
"Collected here, for the first time, are a remarkable range of essays that illuminate networks of Indian businessmen in New York; of marriage practices among Punjabi Sikhs in Britain and among Hyderabadis around the globe; annual commemorations of the classical Karnataka composer-saint Tyagaraja in Cleveland and New Jersey; the building of Hindu temples in Maryland or Atlanta; community formation through the Islamic Circle of North America or among social networks of Bangladeshis in Washington, D.C.; inter-ethnic relations among Ahmadiyya Muslims in Michigan or Queens; Urdu mushairas and qawwali performances in the metropolitan centres of North America; and what it means for scholars of South Asian origin to study South Asia in the Western academy. All these subjects are taken up by The Expanding Landscape's distinguished group of contributors." (jacket)
[Carla Petievich is Associate Professor of History at Montclair State University in New Jersey. Her books include Assembly of Rivals : Delhi, Lucknow.]