Advanced Search

Ethnic and Racial Studies

Volume 23, Issue 1, 2000

Ambiguous insiders: an investigation of Arab American invisibility

Ambiguous insiders: an investigation of Arab American invisibility

DOI:
10.1080/014198700329123
Nadine Naber

pages 37-61

Available online: 07 Dec 2010

Abstract

This article explores Arab American "invisibility" as a central theme in the historical narrative of Arab immigrants and their descendants in North America. "Invisibility" is primarily addressed in terms of Arab Americans' paradoxical positioning within the US racial/ethnic classification system. The article argues that four central paradoxes shape Arab American identity. The first paradox is that Arab Americans are a complex, diverse community, but are represented as a monolith in popular North American media images. The second paradox is that Arab Americans are simultaneously racialized as whites and as non-whites. The third paradox is that Arab Americans are racialized according to religion (Islam) rather than biology (phenotype). The fourth paradox involves the intersection between religious forms of identity that Arab immigrants bring to the US and racial forms of identity that structure US society. Overall, the article claims that each paradox of Arab American identity reinforces the difficulties associated in classifying this population.

Keywords

 

Details

  • Citation information:
  • Available online: 07 Dec 2010

Author affiliations

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group