- Date
2008
- Authors
Neha Vora
- Abstract
Through ethnographic examples, I explore two modes of diasporic subjectiv- ity that I observed among middle-class Indian migrants in Dubai-racial consciousness and consumer citizenship. However, I argue that the alignment of academic and diasporic informants' understandings of mutually exclusive domains such as culture, nation, economy, and state lead to the relative invisibility of this large population in most literature on South Asian diaspo- ras, and I point to a need to theoretically and methodologically begin our anthropological research with how and when domains become distinct for migrant subjects, rather than taking them as a priori forms.
- Journal title
Anthropological Quarterly
- Volume
81
- Issue
2
- Page numbers
377-406
- Publisher
The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research
- File Attachments
- Links
- Economic sectors
General relevance - all sectors
- Target groups
Researchers
- Geographical focuses
India and Regional relevance
- Spheres of activity
Anthropology
- Languages
English