Bültmann & Gerriets
The Sun Never Sets
South Asian Migrants in an Age of U.S. Power
von Vivek Bald, Miabi Chatterji, Sujani Reddy, Manu Vimalassery
Verlag: Princeton University Press
Reihe: NYU Series in Social and Cultural Analysis Nr. 2
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ISBN: 978-0-8147-3939-6
Erschienen am 22.07.2013
Sprache: Englisch

Preis: 32,49 €

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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Vivek Bald, Miabi Chatterji, Sujani Reddy, and Manu Vimalassery

Part I. Overlapping Empires

1 Intimate Dependency, Race, and Trans-Imperial Migration

Nayan Shah

2 Repressing the "Hindu Menace”

Seema Sohi

3 Desertion and Sedition

Vivek Bald

4 "The Hidden Hand”

Sujani Reddy

Part II. From Imperialism to Free-Market Fundamentalism

5 Putting "the Family” to Work

Miabi Chatterji

6 Looking Home

Linta Varghese

7 India's Global and Internal Labor Migration and Resistance

Immanuel Ness

8 Water for Life, Not for Coca-Cola

Amanda Ciafone

9 When an Interpreter Could Not Be Found

Naeem Mohaiemen

Part III. Geographies of Migration, Settlement, and Self

10 Intertwined Violence: Implications of State Responses to Domestic Violence in South Asian Immigrant Communities

Soniya Munshi

11 Who's Your Daddy? Queer Diasporic Framings of the Region

Gayatri Gopinath

12 Awaiting the Twelfth Imam in the United States

Raza Mir and Farah Hasan

13 Tracing the Muslim Body

Junaid Rana

14 Antecedents of Imperial Incarceration

Manu Vimalassery

Afterword

Vijay Prashad

Index

About the Contributors



The Sun Never Sets collects the work of a generation of scholars who are enacting a shift in the orientation of the field of South Asian American studies. By focusing upon the lives, work, and activism of specific, often unacknowledged, migrant populations, the contributors present a more comprehensive vision of the South Asian presence in the United States.
Tracking the changes in global power that have influenced the paths and experiences of migrants, from expatriate Indian maritime workers at the turn of the century, to Indian nurses during the Cold War, to post-9/11 detainees and deportees caught in the crossfire of the "War on Terror," these essays reveal how the South Asian diaspora has been shaped by the contours of U.S. imperialism. Driven by a shared sense of responsibility among the contributing scholars to alter the profile of South Asian migrants in the American public imagination, they address the key issues that impact these migrants in the U.S., on the subcontinent, and in circuits of the transnational economy. Taken together, these essays provide tools with which to understand the contemporary political and economic conjuncture and the place of South Asian migrants within it.


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