As the use of ‘diaspora ’ has proliferated in the last decade, its meaning has been stretched in various directions. This article traces the dispersion of the term in semantic, conceptual and disciplinary space; analyses three core elements that continue to be understood as constitutive of diaspora; assesses claims made by theorists of diaspora about a radical shift in perspective and a fundamental change in the social world; and proposes to treat diaspora not as a bounded entity but as an idiom, stance and claim
“All diasporas are unhappy, but every diaspora is unhappy in its own way” (Mishra 1996: 189). Diaspo...
This volume examines the evolution of the concept of diaspora since the advent of Diaspora Studies i...
Traditionally, the term ‘diaspora’ (from the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible) referred to the ...
The present research paper deals with the concept of diaspora. This concept has emerged as a very po...
The word 'diaspora' has been fashionable for the last twenty years, particularly in the Anglophone l...
This article opens up a debate on the analytical relationship between “identity” and “the diaspora”....
This analytical scoping review contributes to the debate about the diaspora’s terminological dispers...
The concept of diaspora is enriched at present with a variety of readings in the context of globaliz...
In The Dispersion, Stéphane Dufoix skillfully traces how the word "diaspora", first coined in the th...
The ‘semantic domain’ (Tololyan, 1996) that the term diaspora inhabits has received much attention i...
Publicado em "Colonialisms, post-colonialisms and lusophonies: proceedings of the 4th International ...
The chapter traces the career of the concept of diaspora since its inception and early usage in the ...
This commentary proposes a reorientation of diaspora studies towards new configurations of participa...
This short essay explores the modern disciplinary application of the term ‘diaspora’ to non-Jewish a...
The article proposes to adopt the notion of diaspora as social practice for an analysis of Gypsy di...
“All diasporas are unhappy, but every diaspora is unhappy in its own way” (Mishra 1996: 189). Diaspo...
This volume examines the evolution of the concept of diaspora since the advent of Diaspora Studies i...
Traditionally, the term ‘diaspora’ (from the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible) referred to the ...
The present research paper deals with the concept of diaspora. This concept has emerged as a very po...
The word 'diaspora' has been fashionable for the last twenty years, particularly in the Anglophone l...
This article opens up a debate on the analytical relationship between “identity” and “the diaspora”....
This analytical scoping review contributes to the debate about the diaspora’s terminological dispers...
The concept of diaspora is enriched at present with a variety of readings in the context of globaliz...
In The Dispersion, Stéphane Dufoix skillfully traces how the word "diaspora", first coined in the th...
The ‘semantic domain’ (Tololyan, 1996) that the term diaspora inhabits has received much attention i...
Publicado em "Colonialisms, post-colonialisms and lusophonies: proceedings of the 4th International ...
The chapter traces the career of the concept of diaspora since its inception and early usage in the ...
This commentary proposes a reorientation of diaspora studies towards new configurations of participa...
This short essay explores the modern disciplinary application of the term ‘diaspora’ to non-Jewish a...
The article proposes to adopt the notion of diaspora as social practice for an analysis of Gypsy di...
“All diasporas are unhappy, but every diaspora is unhappy in its own way” (Mishra 1996: 189). Diaspo...
This volume examines the evolution of the concept of diaspora since the advent of Diaspora Studies i...
Traditionally, the term ‘diaspora’ (from the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible) referred to the ...