Diaspora Humanities Series, Vol. 10
This book diagnoses ongoing transnational multicultural phenomena in the realms of migrants, media, culture, and history, while exploring new possibilities. At least in the cultural sphere, transnational multiculturalism has now become the norm. The book argues that few concepts are as useful as diaspora in creating the possibility for heterogeneous speakers to communicate with one another in new ways within different political, social, and cultural contexts. Today, migrants and mobile subjects are dismantling ethnic stereotypes themselves, forming new identities in the lands where they settle, and mediating new cultures. The book is composed of three parts.