This paper considers the value of using the experiences of what have been labelled as ‘middling migrants’ to explore the ways in which people continue to understand the world and their own place in it in national terms. It begins with a critical engagement with the literature on banal, hot and everyday nationalism, arguing for a more dynamic model that not only tracks the processes by which largely taken-for-granted forms and practices are opened up to scrutiny and vice versa but also their significance, as both mindful and mindless features of daily life. The second part explores how these processes may operate by focusing on a particular group of migrants; Britons in Australia. The experiences of these people are particularly useful in r...
This paper seeks to relate the scholarly analysis of nationalism – and of the ways in which nation-s...
In this paper we suggest that there is a need to examine what is meant by "context" in Social Psycho...
This article argues that the political success of the economic discourses of globalization within Au...
This research explores experiential narratives of national belonging and dislocation. It focuses on ...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. In this paper I explore how recent public debates about Australian values i...
© 2018 The Authors Nations and Nationalism published by Association for the Study of Ethnicity and N...
Outlining some of the features of migrant belonging brought into relief by debate over refugees and ...
This paper is a post-print of an article Published in Australian Historical Studies vol.36(124)2004 ...
In this paper we explore narratives from interviews with British migrants who had shifted to Austral...
Published in 1995, Michael Billig’s Banal Nationalism is the fourth most cited text on nationalism a...
Current debates around immigration are informed by hierarchies of belonging with some groups seen to...
Ideologies of national belonging and related perceptions of the need to secure the boundedness of th...
The question of who ‘belongs’ is a matter of hot debate across many Western nation- states. As a res...
In an era of accelerated international mobility, individuals have increased opportunities to confron...
Everyday (im)mobilities continuously emerge out of dynamic interactions between bodies, objects and ...
This paper seeks to relate the scholarly analysis of nationalism – and of the ways in which nation-s...
In this paper we suggest that there is a need to examine what is meant by "context" in Social Psycho...
This article argues that the political success of the economic discourses of globalization within Au...
This research explores experiential narratives of national belonging and dislocation. It focuses on ...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. In this paper I explore how recent public debates about Australian values i...
© 2018 The Authors Nations and Nationalism published by Association for the Study of Ethnicity and N...
Outlining some of the features of migrant belonging brought into relief by debate over refugees and ...
This paper is a post-print of an article Published in Australian Historical Studies vol.36(124)2004 ...
In this paper we explore narratives from interviews with British migrants who had shifted to Austral...
Published in 1995, Michael Billig’s Banal Nationalism is the fourth most cited text on nationalism a...
Current debates around immigration are informed by hierarchies of belonging with some groups seen to...
Ideologies of national belonging and related perceptions of the need to secure the boundedness of th...
The question of who ‘belongs’ is a matter of hot debate across many Western nation- states. As a res...
In an era of accelerated international mobility, individuals have increased opportunities to confron...
Everyday (im)mobilities continuously emerge out of dynamic interactions between bodies, objects and ...
This paper seeks to relate the scholarly analysis of nationalism – and of the ways in which nation-s...
In this paper we suggest that there is a need to examine what is meant by "context" in Social Psycho...
This article argues that the political success of the economic discourses of globalization within Au...