2016
DOI: 10.1177/1103308815618138
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Diaspora as an Ethnographic Method

Abstract: Article (Accepted Version) http://sro.sussex.ac.uk James, Malcolm (2016) Diaspora as an ethnographic method: decolonial reflections on researching urban multiculture in outer East London. Young, 24 (3). pp. 222-237. ISSN 1103-3088 This version is available from Sussex Research Online: http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/59771/ This document is made available in accordance with publisher policies and may differ from the published version or from the version of record. If you wish to cite this item you are advised to co… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(33 reference statements)
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“…In depth qualitative research into the relationship between discrimination and transnational practice helps to uncover the shifting racisms, which have been neglected within the field of transnationalism more generally (James 2016). In the UK, the racism of the current conjuncture has led to such a deep-seated insecurity as the political landscape has changed that, in some circumstances, it has been accompanied by a desire to protect oneself through external connections and other sites of belonging.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In depth qualitative research into the relationship between discrimination and transnational practice helps to uncover the shifting racisms, which have been neglected within the field of transnationalism more generally (James 2016). In the UK, the racism of the current conjuncture has led to such a deep-seated insecurity as the political landscape has changed that, in some circumstances, it has been accompanied by a desire to protect oneself through external connections and other sites of belonging.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is not to suggest a particular diasporic group are internally homogenous and that there is one diasporic epistemology or experience. Indeed, there are trenchant critiques that our conceptualization of diaspora as being different, hybrid or occupying in‐betweenness reinforces ideas of coloniality and practices of racism by ‘othering’ those who are seen to be ‘different’ (James, 2016). Rather, drawing on Stuart Hall and the distinct layering of African, European and American presence that constitute Caribbean identities, challenges us to think about who is the native and who is the migrant and how we come to embody and complicate these ideas of race and difference.…”
Section: Positioning Diaspora and Diasporic Knowledgementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scholarship on diasporic positioning has also critiqued problematic discussions of identity and hybridity in relation to diaspora communities (Mitchell, 1997; Ahmed, 2013). Some scholars have critiqued the conceptualization of diaspora, arguing that much mainstream work on it continues to preserve colonial ways of thinking about the world—that diaspora remains the ‘other’ linked to ‘elsewhere’ (James, 2016). Gowricharn (2022: 2) for example notes that ethnogenesis may offer a useful way to understand how new ethnicities, hybridities, home‐making practices, place attachment and bondings come to be formed in the diaspora.…”
Section: Introduction: Situating the Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These young women could never occupy one space fully, rather they would find themselves negotiating a single space while also occupying several others. Although classic research tends to frame Pacific youth identities in New Zealand as diasporic (e.g., Aporosa, 2015;Balme & Carstensen, 2001;Chaitin, Awwad, & Andriani, 2009;Esser, 2012;James, 2016), Tupuola turned to the work of Nina Krebs (1999) and the idea of edgewalking. Krebs's own writing breaks the academic rules in providing a number of narratives that draw truths to her concept of edgewalking, as such, the best definition is found in the synopsis or her work:…”
Section: Exploring the Edges Of The Emic And Eticmentioning
confidence: 99%