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University of Mississippi SOC 101 Reading 31 “Muslim Self-Identities after 9/11” Lori Peek 1)Which of the following groups of people might be considered Muslims? African Americans Arab Americans White Americans any of the above might be a Muslim According to Peek, which of the following are reasons why people adopt a religious identity in a multi-cultural society such as the United States? religion offers people community networks, economic opportunities, and educational resources
University of Mississippi
SOC 101
Reading 31
“Muslim Self-Identities after 9/11” Lori Peek
1)Which of the following groups of people might be considered Muslims?
-
- African Americans
- Arab Americans
- White Americans
- any of the above might be a Muslim
- According to Peek, which of the following are reasons why people adopt a religious identity in a multi-cultural society such as the United States?
-
- religion offers people community networks, economic opportunities, and educational resources.
- religion may serve as an important marker that helps preserve group cohesion.
- religion can serve to reduce tensions caused by immigrant and ethnic diversity, so that people identify themselves first and foremost by their religious identity.
- all of the above
- For Peek, during the phase that she identified as “ascribed identity,” Muslim children were mostly likely to think of themselves in which of the following ways?
-
- Muslim children thought little about their religious identity and mostly took it for granted as part of their everyday lives.
- Muslim children were seriously engaged in Muslim activities and attended almost exclusive Muslim organizations and events.
- Muslim children rejected all of their Muslim identity, choosing to play and hang around with only American, non-Muslim children.
- Muslim children were sequestered away from children who were not Muslims, and had no contact with people from other religious and ethnic backgrounds.
- During the “ascribed identity” phase of Muslim children’s relationship to the larger American culture that Peek described, which of the following best illustrates these children’s assimilation patterns?
-
- like many new immigrants groups, these children stuck close to their ethnic enclaves and had little to do with people of other ethnicities.
- like many new immigrant groups, Muslim children felt the pressure to assimilate to American norms and values quickly, attempting to “pass” as unidentified ethnic Americans.
- like many new immigrant groups, Muslim children went through a period of American hatred, disdaining all of the norms and values of the larger American culture.
- like many new immigrant groups, Muslim children gave little thought to their religious or ethnic identities.
- In Peek’s study of Muslim Americans after 9/11, what was the relationship between young adults’ embracement of a Muslim identity and their going off to college?
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- college was a time to learn about new religions and many Muslims rejected their Muslim identity during these years.
- they encountered so much prejudice and discrimination in college that they found themselves hanging out exclusively with other Muslims.
- college was a time when they re-discovered their Muslim roots and were more likely to seek out friends who were Muslims.
- none of the people who Peek interviewed attended a college with a Muslim student organization, so it was unlikely for them to meet others like themselves.
- For Muslims living in the United States right after the September 11, 2001 attacks, which of the following best illustrates what they experienced?
-
- Americans from all walks of life felt for the Muslim’s plight and embraced them like no other time before.
-
- there was a division within the Muslim community, with Muslim Arabs on one side and all other Muslims on another.
- Muslims in the time directly after the attack denounced their religious identities, hoping to not be recognized or noticed.
- many Muslims reported acts of discrimination, harassment, racial profiling, and assault that they had to endure.
- Based on your understanding of Peek’s research on Muslim Americans, which of the following best illustrates what happened to the Muslim community right after the 9/11 terrorist attacks?
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- the Muslim community became fractured and divided, with little consensus or agreement about what they should do as a whole.
- after the attacks, Muslims felt a stronger bond with each other, feeling as if they had to explain their religion and faith to others.
- in the years following the 9/11 attacks, Muslim Americans increasingly became more assimilated into the larger American culture.
- shortly after the 9/11 attacks, a majority of Muslim American left the United States to return to their countries of origin.
- After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, young Muslim Americans were more likely to do which of the following?
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- men grew beards to show their solidarity with other Muslims.
- women began to wear headscarves more often to show their solidarity with other Muslims.
- Muslim parents wanted their children to tone down their presentations as Muslims because they feared that they would be hurt.
- all of the above
- Which of the following best summarizes Peek’s conclusions about the development of religious identities in multi-cultural societies?
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- religious identity, once formed, stays with one for life, and very little can change how people feel about their own religion.
- although religious identity is enduring, most people give it up or make it a less meaningful part of their lives as they mature.
- religious identity can be transient, with it representing a strong force at some times in life, and a weaker force at other times in life.
- Peek feels that the religious identity experienced by Muslim Americans is a unique event in American history, and there can be no generalizations made about this to other groups.
- According to Peek, which of the following is the fastest growing religion in the United States?
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- Christianity
- Judaism
- Islam
- Atheism
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