7 research outputs found
Coming to Terms with Western Social Science Three Historical Lessons from Asia (Special Section : Toward Post-Western Sociologies : East-West Dialogue)
Multifarious Transnational Engagements of Contemporary Diaspora Members: From Revolving-door Universalists to Multi-nationals and Site-Hopping Vagabonds
Drawing on recent studies of diaspora and its members’ transnational engagements, which treat the former as fuzzy-boundary, context-dependent groupings, and the latter as multi-faceted (rather than two-pronged) relationships, in this paper I explore the notion of diasporans’ polymorphous and multi-directional transnational commitments; identify different types of such involvements; and propose a preliminary list of macro- and micro-level circumstances contributing to multifarious transnationalism. In conclusion, I consider the implications of the notion of diaspora members’ multifarious transnational engagements for the study of (im)migrant transnationalism in general and suggest some interesting questions for future research on this phenomenon generated by this discussion
Coming to Terms with Western Social Science Three Historical Lessons from Asia (Special Section : Toward Post-Western Sociologies : East-West Dialogue)
The ‘symbolic homeland’ in the Jewish Italian Diaspora: the celebration of civil religion in Italy
In this article, the attitudes of the Italian Jewish diaspora towards Israel, seen as a symbolic homeland, are analyzed. This analysis is based on the theoretical discourse on diaspora.
Attitudes are explored through the participation of Italian Jews in the celebration of Yom ha atzma’ut. Given the significance of Israel’s Independence Day in the sequence of the three-day civil religious commemoration in Israel – which constitutes a sort of national narrative – the entire sequence is also considered in the analysis of the Italian diaspor
