Routledge Handbook of Diaspora Studies

Author:   Robin Cohen ,  Carolin Fischer
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138631137


Pages:   364
Publication Date:   08 August 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Routledge Handbook of Diaspora Studies


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Author:   Robin Cohen ,  Carolin Fischer
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.603kg
ISBN:  

9781138631137


ISBN 10:   1138631132
Pages:   364
Publication Date:   08 August 2018
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Diaspora studies: an introduction PART I: EXPLORING AND DEBATING DIASPORA 1. Diaspora before it became a concept 2. Diaspora studies: past, present and promise 3. Key methodological tools for diaspora studies: combining the transnational and intersectional approaches 4. The social construction of diasporas: conceptual development and the Rwandan case 5. Diasporas as social movements? 6. Performing diaspora 7. Embodying belonging: diaspora’s racialization and cultural citizenship 8. Music, dance and diaspora 9. Diasporic filmmaking in Europe 10. Writing in Diaspora PART II: COMPLEX DIASPORAS 11. Making and ‘faking’ a diasporic heritage 12. Translanguaging and diasporic imagination 13. Multi-religious diasporas: rethinking the relationship between religion and diaspora 14. Homelessness and statelessness: possibilities and perils 15. Diaspora and class, class and diaspora 16. Working-class cosmopolitans and diaspora 17. Transversal crossings and diasporic intersections 18. Intersectionalizing diaspora studies 19. Bridging the mobility–sedentarism and agency–structure dichotomies in diasporic return migration PART III: HOME AND HOME-MAKING 20. Unravelling the conceptual link between transnationalism and diaspora: hometown networks 21. Deportees as ‘reverse diasporas’ 22. Diasporicity: relative embeddedness in transnational and co-ethnic networks 23. Moral comforts of remaining in exile: snapshots from conflict-generated Indonesian diasporas 24. Islamic schooling and the second generation: a diaspora perspective 25. Diaspora and home: interrogating embodied precarity in an era of forced displacement 26. Diasporas and political obligation PART IV: CONNECTING DIASPORA 27. Diaspora and religion: connecting and disconnecting 28. Digital diasporas 29. Diaspora politics and political remittances: a conceptual reflection 30. Diasporas building peace: reflections from the experience of Middle Eastern diasporas 31. Postcolonial states, nation-building and the (un)making of diasporas 32. The plasticity of diasporic identities in super-diverse cities 33. Displaced imaginations, bodies and things: materiality and subjectivity of forced migration PART V: CRITIQUES AND APPLIED DIASPORA STUDIES 34. Preserving or discarding diaspora 35. Disconnecting from home: contesting the salience of the diaspora 36. Why engage diasporas? 37. Diaspora mobilizations for conflict: beyond amplification and reduction 38. Diasporas and development 39. Diasporas and the politics of memory and commemoration 40. At home in diaspora: the Babylonian Talmud as diasporist manifesto

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Author Information

Robin Cohen is Professor Emeritus of Development Studies and Senior Research Fellow, Kellogg College, University of Oxford. He writes on globalization, development, migration, creolization, diasporas and identity. His books include: Frontiers of identity: the British and the others (1994), Global diasporas: an introduction (2008), Encountering difference: diasporic traces, creolizing spaces (2016) (with Olivia Sheringham) and Island societies (2017). He is currently writing an intellectual history of key intellectuals at eight universities where he has held academic appointments and, with Nicholas Van Hear, developing a solution to the problem of mass displacement using the notion of ‘Refugia’. Carolin Fischer is a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland. Her current work examines how migrant descendants experience, interpret, appropriate and modify otherness in their everyday lives. In 2015 Carolin completed a doctorate in Development Studies at the University of Oxford. Her doctoral thesis is about the lives and civic engagements of Afghans in Germany and the UK. During her time at Oxford, Carolin worked as a research and teaching assistant at the Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS), the International Migration Institute (IMI) and the Refugee Studies Centre (RSC). Carolin’s areas of interest are identity formation, inter- and intra-group dynamics and forms of civic and political engagement in the context of migration and mobility. Her recent work has appeared in Ethnicities, The Journal of Intercultural Studies and Global Networks.

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