Multiple homemaking : the ethnic condition in Indian diaspora societies / Ruben Gowricharn.
By: Gowricharn, Ruben [author.].
Publisher: New York : Routledge, 2021Description: ix,182p.ISBN: 9781003002086.Subject(s): East Indians -- Foreign countries -- Social conditions | East Indians -- Foreign countries -- Ethnic identity | East Indian diaspora | TransnationalismDDC classification: 305.8914Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | NASSDOC Library | 305.8914 GOW-M (Browse shelf) | Available | 52110 |
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305.891 MAY-; Against history, against state: counterperspectives from the margins | 305.8914 CAR- Caribbean issues in the Indian diaspora | 305.8914 GLO- Global Indian diaspora : | 305.8914 GOW-M Multiple homemaking : | 305.8914 TRA- Transnational South Asians: the making of a neo-diaspora | 305.89140411 WAR-S Social Control and Deviance | 305.891411 NON-; Development, ethnicity and gender : select essays on tribes in India |
Introduction : the issue of immigrant homemaking -- British Indian ethnogenesis : their historical homemaking in the Caribbean -- Ethnicity and political integration : making the political home -- Homemaking by Douglarisation? -- Institutional homemaking of Dutch Hindustanis -- Second-generation transnationalism -- Technology, social networks and culture of young Hindustanis -- Shopping in Mumbai : transnational homemaking.
This book develops a theoretical perspective on homemaking as the ethnic condition of Indian diaspora communities. It draws on empirical case studies to elucidate the multiple homemaking practices of two overseas Indian groups and their relations to their homeland, namely the Surinami Hindustanis and the Dutch Hindustanis. In doing so, it provides a new perspective on homemaking that captures ethnogenesis, integration, and diasporic bonding at once. As opposed to the extant discourse on homemaking which overlooks institutional and cultural requirements, the author makes a point to scrutinise such concepts as douglarisation, groupism, citizenship, institutions, ethnification, social networks and technology, and transnational flows. Unique and compelling, the book will be highly useful in studies of diaspora, globalization and transnational migration, multiculturalism, cultural studies, ethnic minority studies, sociology, politics and international relations, and South Asian studies
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