
New Books in African 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, assistant professor of history at USC and author of Atlantic Crescent, explores linked Black, Afro-Caribbean, and South Asian Muslim worlds. She traces archival discoveries like Muhammad Speaks. Topics include overlapping diasporic encounters, Moorish Science and Ahmadiyya interactions, Malcolm X’s internationalism, and how these movements circulated into Bermuda’s anti-imperial organizing.
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Atlantic Crescent As Dynamic Geography
- The "Atlantic Crescent" frames overlapping Black, Afro-Caribbean, and South Asian Muslim diasporas as a shifting, perspective-based geography of shared struggles.
- Alaina M. Morgan uses the moon crescent analogy to show how local experiences shape diverse Islam-race formations across places and times.
Newspapers As Layered Social Archives
- Muhammad Speaks and other Black Muslim newspapers are layered sources that reveal business, evangelism, and community concerns simultaneously.
- Morgan reads these pages for people’s priorities and emotions rather than treating them as disjointed or "schizophrenic."
Use All Sources To Center People
- Treat any material as a usable source and center people’s lived experiences when writing history.
- Read newspapers and small archives for voices, feelings, and intellectual work, not just facts.

