The mobilization of people, populations, and places--and the
social interrelations of space and time, memory and longing, and
the global and local--are uniquely analyzed in this fascinating
study. Instead of viewing social and cultural relations through the
lenses of rigid institutions, fixed territories, or rooted
communities, Ilcan focuses on mobile sites to explore the cultural
politics of settlement. This book examines the social relations of
longing and belonging to be found in nation building, ethnographic
practices, dwelling, and diasporas.
Ilcan propels us into various dimensions of movement, as well as
social relations in the fields of dispersion, transition, and
displacement. Drawing on insights from cultural studies, sociology,
and anthropology, she inquires into contemporary and critical
issues on the movement of peoples. Transitional communities
represent the tensions and risks confronting those compelled to
leave home, or those for whom a sense of longing superseded any
feeling of belonging.
This book provides fresh insight into the placement, and
displacement, of particular social groups, including guest workers,
migrants, and immigrants. Ilcan covers the varieties of diasporic
relations and the settlements they form, as well as the manifold
ways in which they affect traditional practices of settlement. She
considers the cultural, economic, and political implications of
globalization, evoking the struggle in our places of habitation,
and the strategies deployed to subvert our habits of
settlement.
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