This dissertation proposes that understandings of what it means to be Muslim American are filtered through distinctly US configurations of racial identity. Islam at Home examines this intersection of race and religion in the writings of Muslim Americans by taking the concept of whiteness and Muslim American identity as sites of difference. I argue that in challenging and reworking US cultural myths, Muslim American writers not only rewrite themselves as at home but also change the very dimensions of home. I use theories of African American Muslim liminality as well as intersectional theories—black Muslim feminist and identity performance—to examine intra-ummah and wider US understandings of Muslim American identity and belonging. Chapter 1 locates the origins of Muslim American literature in the writings of enslaved African Muslims, and through readings of Omar ibn Said’s 1831 autobiography The Life of Omar Ibn Said (2011) and Malcolm X’s The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965) examines the shifts in what it has meant to be black, Muslim, and Black Muslim in the US. I underscore how racism, specifically anti-blackness, figures into the US public sphere’s understanding of Muslim identity. Chapter 2 analyzes Mohja Kahf’s novel The Girl in the Tangerine Scarf (2006), and examines US and intra-ummah depictions of the hijabi, arguing that US depictions are read through a lens of antipathy to non-white femininity. In centering her main character’s experiences between those of two black women, Kahf promotes cross-cultural sisterly alliances as resistance to US racism and xenophobia and intra-ummah silence on anti-black racism. Chapter 3 focuses on Wajahat Ali’s play The Domestic Crusaders (2004, 2010), and explores some of the different ways in which the post-9/11 racialization of Islam crystallized a number of Muslim identities as not-white. In examining the terrorist amalgame I pay particular attention to what it has meant to perform Muslimness as opposed to status as Muslim alone and argue that Ali uses such performances to engage with paradigms that question Muslim American presence and shape what it is to be Muslim against hegemonic ideas of the US.