
New Books Network 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, an academic historian exploring Black and Muslim diasporas, discusses her book Atlantic Crescent. She traces overlapping Black, Afro‑Caribbean, and South Asian Muslim encounters using newspapers and archives. Topics include Muhammad Speaks, transnational figures like Abdul Basim Naeem, Bermuda’s diasporic politics, grassroots drug‑response programs, and how shared anti‑imperial struggles shaped imagined geographies.
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Atlantic Crescent As Living Geography
- The "Atlantic Crescent" frames overlapping Black, Afro-Caribbean, and South Asian Muslim diasporas as dynamic, perspective-dependent geographies of struggle.
- Alaina M. Morgan uses the crescent metaphor to show how local experiences of Islam and race shift across time and place.
Newspapers As Layered Archives
- Newspapers like Muhammad Speaks function as layered archives revealing business, evangelism, visual culture, and everyday concerns.
- Morgan treats them as porous sources that let historians trace what mattered to people beyond official records.
Overlap Explains Diasporic Exchange
- Overlap is central: diasporic communities constantly engage, contest, and borrow from each other rather than existing in silos.
- Morgan argues overlap explains cultural and intellectual exchanges across Black, Afro-Caribbean, and South Asian Muslims.

