2019
DOI: 10.1177/0731121419895006
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Successful yet Precarious: South Asian Muslim Americans, Islamophobia, and the Model Minority Myth

Abstract: Precariousness is the notion that unstable and temporary employment can induce feelings of vulnerability and insecurity. As a “successful” minority because of their high education levels and economic attainments, South Asian Americans can hardly be described as precarious. However, ethnographic observations reveal a collective precariousness felt by this group. Despite measures of success, their positionality as a racialized and stigmatized religious “Other” induces in them an insecurity akin to that felt by t… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Both Khadija and Aisha explain how being forced to repress important values and beliefs-in Mir's (2011, p. 554) terms, 'half-disavowal of identity'-can lead to self-recrimination. The exchange above echoes cognate studies (see Mythen 2012;Khan and Mythen 2019;Lems 2021;Shams 2020) and illustrates both the complexities and the accumulative cost of maintaining public equilibrium at the expense of muting cherished facets of culture, faith and identity. External pressure to perform a role that will be acceptable to the majority can be exasperating, as Zahra reflects:…”
Section: Adjusting To Context: Strategic Adaptionsupporting
confidence: 54%
“…Both Khadija and Aisha explain how being forced to repress important values and beliefs-in Mir's (2011, p. 554) terms, 'half-disavowal of identity'-can lead to self-recrimination. The exchange above echoes cognate studies (see Mythen 2012;Khan and Mythen 2019;Lems 2021;Shams 2020) and illustrates both the complexities and the accumulative cost of maintaining public equilibrium at the expense of muting cherished facets of culture, faith and identity. External pressure to perform a role that will be acceptable to the majority can be exasperating, as Zahra reflects:…”
Section: Adjusting To Context: Strategic Adaptionsupporting
confidence: 54%
“…In other words, success was-at least in part-framed as reproducing uppermiddle-class socioeconomic status alongside educational attainment. This finding reflects parents' desire to guard against precariousness in the third generation, a wider fear found to be shared among other Muslim Americans, particularly those of South Asian descent (Shams 2020).…”
Section: Zarinamentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Additionally, many immigrant workers do so to provide monetary remittances to countries of origin, which can further constrain resources for health (Acevedo-Garcia et al, 2012), with more hostile policies proposing "double" taxes on these remittances (Ratha et al, 2017). Among immigrant groups with higher levels of success, racialization contributes to ongoing feelings of precariousness and insecurity (Shams, 2020), and challenges remain in terms of equal pay, promotions, and upward mobility (Yi et al, 2016).…”
Section: Economic Exploitation and Disinvestmentmentioning
confidence: 99%