
New Books in Islamic Studies Alaina M. Morgan, "Atlantic Crescent: Building Geographies of Black and Muslim Liberation in the African Diaspora" (UNC Press, 2025)
Jan 27, 2026
Alaina M. Morgan, historian and assistant professor studying Black and Muslim diasporas. She explains the “Atlantic Crescent” linking Black, Afro-Caribbean, and South Asian Muslim encounters. Topics include newspapers as layered archives, transnational figures like Abdul Basi Naim, Nation of Islam internationalism and Malcolm X, and Bermuda as a hub for diasporic circulation and political organizing.
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From Law To History Through Personal Religion
- Alaina M. Morgan recounts her path from law to religious studies and then to history, sparked by personal doubts about Catholicism and interest in religion.
- She traced a research thread from a seminar paper on Muhammad Speaks into a decade-long book project.
Newspapers As Layered Social Archives
- Morgan treats newspapers like layered cultural artifacts that reveal both business, evangelism, and everyday concerns.
- She argues that letters, ads, and visuals expose what communities actually value beyond official narratives.
Atlantic Crescent As Dynamic Imagined Geography
- The 'Atlantic Crescent' frames overlapping Black, Afro-Caribbean, and South Asian Muslim diasporas as shifting, perspective-dependent geographies.
- Morgan uses the crescent/moon metaphor to emphasize change across time, place, and individual experience.

