The demobilization of diaspora: history, memory and ‘latent identity’

TitleThe demobilization of diaspora: history, memory and ‘latent identity’
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsVictoria Redclift
JournalGlobal Networks
Volume17
Issue4
Pagination500-517
ISSN1471-0374
Abstract

In the context of sustained interest in the mobilization of diasporic identities, I consider how and why diasporic identities might be demobilized over time. I use the case of an Indian Pakistani community in the UK and the USA (sometimes referred to as ‘Bihari’) to examine how historical memories of conflict are narrated in diaspora and the impact this has on the presence or absence of ‘diasporic consciousness'. The significance of memory in diasporic and transnational communities has been neglected, especially where the narration of historical events is concerned. The impact of forgetting has received particularly scant attention. I argue that, in the absence of this story, important lessons about the role of history in the formation of community are obscured. In this example, the ‘latent’ identities created on diaspora's demobilization help us to unpick the dyadic relations of ‘home’ and ‘away’ at the heart of essentialist conceptualizations of the concept.

URLhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com.proxy.library.stonybrook.edu/doi/10.1111/glob.12150/abstract
DOI10.1111/glob.12150
Short TitleThe demobilization of diaspora