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New Imagined Community - Global Media and the Construction of National and Muslim Identities of Migrants (Hardcover, New)
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New Imagined Community - Global Media and the Construction of National and Muslim Identities of Migrants (Hardcover, New)
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Advanced media technologies - satellite technology and the Internet
- have transformed immigrants' relations with their sending and
receiving societies. In the first part of the book - "Imagining
Nation States from Afar" - Uriya Shavit extends Benedict Anderson's
model of the nation as an imagined community. Discussion focuses on
how immigrants are enabled to imagine their native national
communities from afar, almost as if they never left their
homelands. As a result, new typologies of migrants are created,
such as the passive trans-national. A comprehensive analytic
framework for the role of advanced media technologies in fostering
relations between immigrants and their national communities of
origin is presented. In addition the author explores, through
biographical research with immigrants of diverse nationalities, the
spectrum of responses imagination of national communities from afar
invokes among different types of immigrants (the sojourner, the
member of an ethnic community and the long-distance national). ...
The second part of the book - "Imagining the Muslim Nation from
Afar" - is an exploration of how Muslim-Arab religious scholars,
envisioning the rise of a global Muslim nation, have developed over
the past thirty years a theory that tasks Muslims living in the
West with specific duties within the framework of their anticipated
global Muslim nation. These Muslim-Arab religious scholars and
other advocates were quick to discover the merits of advanced media
technologies in enhancing their vision of global Islam. The
author's biographical field research was conducted with devout
Muslims who migrated from Arab countries in five mosques in
Frankfurt am Main, Germany. His research illustrates how the
proliferation of this global Muslim media plays an increasingly
important - albeit limited - role in shaping the identity of Muslim
immigrants. These specific challenges to the foundations of the
modern liberal nation state are ripe for discussion given the
world-wide concern over immigration and its consequences.
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