5741 | 6 May 2005 11:44 |
Date: Fri, 6 May 2005 11:44:37 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Query, Sean McGarry | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Query, Sean McGarry MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit From: Jim O'Keeffe j.okeeffe[at]londonmet.ac.uk Subject: Sean McGarry Patrick Could you kindly circulate the following email to fellow IR-Ders. Can anyone suggest a source for biographical information, and indeed any info, on Sean McGarry? He was on the IRB Supreme Council, 1908-1916 and elected President of that body, as well as General Secratary of the Volunteers, in 1917. Regards Jim ********************************** James O'Keeffe Department of Education North Campus London Metropolitan University Extn. 2661 Direct Line. 020 7133 2661 E-mail. j.okeeffe[at]londonmet.ac.uk ********************************** | |
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5742 | 6 May 2005 13:10 |
Date: Fri, 6 May 2005 13:10:40 -0200
Reply-To: Peter Hart | |
Re: Query, Sean McGarry | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Peter Hart Subject: Re: Query, Sean McGarry Comments: To: Patrick O'Sullivan In-Reply-To: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" I would imagine he'd be covered by the new Irish Dict. of National Biography but one place to look for info. is David Fitzpatrick's recent bio of Harry Boland. Very good on the IRB. Peter Hart At 11:44 AM 06/05/2005 +0100, Patrick O'Sullivan wrote: >From: Jim O'Keeffe >j.okeeffe[at]londonmet.ac.uk >Subject: Sean McGarry > > >Patrick > >Could you kindly circulate the following email to fellow IR-Ders. > >Can anyone suggest a source for biographical information, and indeed any >info, on Sean McGarry? He was on the IRB Supreme Council, 1908-1916 and >elected President of that body, as well as General Secratary of the >Volunteers, in 1917. > >Regards > >Jim > >********************************** > >James O'Keeffe >Department of Education >North Campus >London Metropolitan University >Extn. 2661 >Direct Line. 020 7133 2661 >E-mail. j.okeeffe[at]londonmet.ac.uk > >********************************** > | |
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5743 | 6 May 2005 14:27 |
Date: Fri, 6 May 2005 14:27:38 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Query, Sean McGarry | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Query, Sean McGarry MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit From: P.Maume[at]Queens-Belfast.AC.UK Subject: Re: [IR-D] Query, Sean McGarry From: Patrick Maume Sean McGarry was a Cumann na nGaedheal TD in the early 1920s. During the Civil War his house was destroyed by Republicans and his young son, Emmet, received severe burns leading to death some days later. The incident caused widespread revulsion & was regularly recalled in Cumann na nGaedheal election propaganda during the 1920s. Newspaper coverage of the tragedy should provide some material on McGarry's early career. I don't know how long McGarry remained a TD or what constituency he represented, but Brian Walker's book collection of post-1922 election results should provide these details. Best wishes, Patrick > From: Jim O'Keeffe > j.okeeffe[at]londonmet.ac.uk > Subject: Sean McGarry > > Can anyone suggest a source for biographical information, and indeed > any info, on Sean McGarry? He was on the IRB Supreme Council, > 1908-1916 and elected President of that body, as well as General > Secratary of the Volunteers, in 1917. > > Regards > > Jim | |
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5744 | 10 May 2005 10:58 |
Date: Tue, 10 May 2005 10:58:48 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
CFP The Irish Atlantic: Intercultural Contact and Conflict | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: CFP The Irish Atlantic: Intercultural Contact and Conflict MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit From: Jason King jkingk[at]yahoo.com Call For Papers: The Irish Atlantic: Intercultural Contact and Conflict At the invitation of Cambridge Scholars Press, a proposal for an edited collection of essays, provisionally entitled The Irish Atlantic: Intercultural Contact and Conflict, will be submitted for publication. The edited collection will consist of a mixture of selected proceedings from the Canadian Association for Irish Studies (CAIS) Conference on the theme of "Ireland and the Atlantic: Intercultural Contact and Conflict", to be held at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, June 22-25, 2005, as well as selected essays chosen from the submissions received from this targeted call for papers. Submissions in relation to the following areas are particularly welcome: Anthropological, cultural, geographical, historical, literary, and sociological analyses of the Irish Atlantic that focus on the interrelation between the collective experience of migration and Irish perceptions of modernization and modernity, especially ones that seek to build upon, engage with, or modify Paul Gilroy's conceptual framework of "The Black Atlantic" and/or Linebaugh and Rediker's idea of a "Revolutionary Atlantic". Anthropological, cultural, geographical, historical, literary, and sociological analyses of the interrelations between Irish migrants and First Nations or indigenous peoples in North, Central, and South America. The racialization of the Irish in a Trans-Atlantic context, and Irish collective experiences of inter-cultural contact/conflict with other ethnic groups, such as African-Americans, French-Canadiens, Latin Americans, and others. The formation, inculcation, and transmission of Irish diasporic communities, forms of consciousness, and constructions of trans-national identity across the Atlantic and over a period of generations. The diffusion, adaptation, and transference of Irish cultural, linguistic, and literary forms across the Atlantic. Anthropological, cultural, geographical, historical, literary, and sociological analyses of the Irish immigrant experience in North, Central, and South America. The formation and institutionalization of migratory routes between Ireland and any destination in the North, Central, or Southern Atlantic sphere While submissions in these areas will be prioritized for the edited collection, any proposal that reasonably addresses the topic of the Irish Atlantic will be seriously considered for publication in the volume. Submitted essays should be up to approx. 6000 words in length (including notes etc.) and should follow either the MLA Style Sheet (literatures and languages) or the *Chicago Manual of Style* (other disciplines). The author's name should appear only on the cover sheet in order to facilitate blind vetting, and all submissions will be refereed and evaluated in terms of their suitability for the edited collection. Please send two hard copies and one electronic copy, by *1 August 2005*, to: Dr. Jason King English Department National University of Ireland, Maynooth Maynooth, County Kildare E-mail enquiries: jkingk[at]yahoo.com | |
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5745 | 10 May 2005 11:00 |
Date: Tue, 10 May 2005 11:00:13 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Prosperity and Plunder: European Catholic Monasteries in the Age | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Prosperity and Plunder: European Catholic Monasteries in the Age of Revolution, 1650-1815_. MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan Pasted in, below, a paragraph from Douglas Palmer's review of Beales... The h-net web link will take you to the full text. P.O'S. Reviewed for H-Catholic by Douglas Palmer Derek Beales. _Prosperity and Plunder: European Catholic Monasteries in the Age of Revolution, 1650-1815_. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. xviii + 395 pp. $50.00(cloth), ISBN 0-5215-9090-6. http://www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=227551115134328 '....Another, perhaps more serious objection, is the complete omission of the case of Ireland, where it appears the model of "prosperity" followed by "plunder" was perhaps reversed. Catholicism, to be sure, was part of "hidden Ireland" during the eighteenth century; yet one account numbers a total of forty active Dominican communities in 1734. There were certainly active communities from other orders, and this number surely increased over the course of the century.In fact, while the Age of Revolutions might have contributed to the "plunder" of the Church on the continent, the general spirit of Enlightenment and toleration created relative prosperity in Ireland, to the point that a Catholic university, St. Patrick's College, Maynooth, was granted a charter by the Irish Parliament in 1795, perhaps demonstrating a level of prosperity.[2] Again, these are relatively minor objections; overall, this book should provide an essential roadmap for scholars of eighteenth-century church history...' | |
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5746 | 10 May 2005 15:12 |
Date: Tue, 10 May 2005 15:12:35 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Institute of Irish Studies invitation to Memory Day and Book | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Institute of Irish Studies invitation to Memory Day and Book Launch, Belfast MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan -----Original Message----- Subject: Institute of Irish Studies invitation to Memory Day and Book Launch Dear Colleagues The Institute is holding two events which you may be interested in attending. Please rsvp, only if you wish to attend, to the people listed below. Do not reply to this e-mail: Memory Day On Thursday, May 19th, the Institute of Irish Studies will hold a unique collaborative research colloquy to examine the creative tensions between memory and forgetting within (Irish)culture. More details and a timetable of the day's events can be seen on our website at: http://www.qub.ac.uk/iis/news/index.htm If you would like to attend, please contact Dr Gillian McIntosh at g.mcintosh[at]qub.ac.uk This will be followed by a wine reception and book launch with the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry: Blackstaff Press in association with the Institute of Irish Studies and the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry invite you to a reception to celebrate the publication of 'The Yellow Nib', the literary journal of the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry, edited by Ciaran Carson. Ciaran Carson, Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill and friends will give readings at the launch which is to be held at 6pm on Thursday 19 May, 2005 at the Institute of Irish Studies, 53-67 University Road, Belfast BT7 1NN. RSVP Abigail Vint, Blackstaff Press. Tel: 028 9073 0113. E-mail: marketing[at]blackstaffpress.com Best wishes Catherine Boone Administrator Institute of Irish Studies Queen's University Belfast University Road Belfast BT7 1NN Tel: 44 (0) 28 9097 3386 Email: irish.studies[at]qub.ac.uk Website: www.qub.ac.uk/iis | |
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5747 | 11 May 2005 10:13 |
Date: Wed, 11 May 2005 10:13:40 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
=?US-ASCII?Q?Preliminary_TOC_Canadian_Journal_of_Irish_Studies=2C_Special?= | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: =?US-ASCII?Q?Preliminary_TOC_Canadian_Journal_of_Irish_Studies=2C_Special?= =?US-ASCII?Q?_Issue:_=22Irish-Canadian_Connections=22?= MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan Pasted in below is the proposed TOC of the Canadian Journal of Irish Studies, Special Issue: "Irish-Canadian Connections" vol. 31: no. 1 (Spring / Printemps, 2005), edited by Jason King & Kevin James... P.O'S. Preliminary Table of Contents: Canadian Journal of Irish Studies, Special Issue: "Irish-Canadian Connections" vol. 31: no. 1 (Spring / Printemps, 2005). Eds. Jason King & Kevin James (Maynooth & Guelph University). Willeen Keogh, "Ethnicity as Intercultural Dialogue in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Newfoundland". Andrea Cabajsky, "The National Tale from Ireland to French Canada: Putting Generic Incentive into a New Perspective". Jason King, "Prefiguring the Peaceable Kingdom: The Construction of Counter-Revolutionary Sentiment in Irish-Canadian Romantic Verse and Prose". David A. Wilson, "'A Rooted Horror': Thomas D'Arcy McGee and Secret Societies, 1845-68". Gary Peatling, "Conflict and Ireland, 1829-2003: Canadian and American stories". Michael Kenneally, "Inscribing Irish Identities in Upper Canada: Patrick Slater's The Yellow Briar". Jason King, "Modern Irish-Canadian Literature: Defining the Peaceable Kingdom". Linda Connolly, "Comparing Ireland and Quebec: The Case of Feminism". "Canadian, Irish, and African Theatre Links: An Interview with George Seremba" (Jason King). Sources for further Research: Kevin James, "Irish Female Domestics in Canada: Evidence from the 1901 Census Sample". Jim Jackson, "The radicalization of the Montreal Irish: the role of The Vindicator". Brian Lambkin, "Thomas D'Arcy McGee's and Charles Gavan Duffy's 'The Irish Chiefs': Diasporic Trajectories of a Young Ireland Text in Canada, the United States, and Australia". Johanne Devlin Trew, "Challenging Utopia: Irish migrant narratives of Canada". | |
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5748 | 11 May 2005 10:15 |
Date: Wed, 11 May 2005 10:15:35 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
AHRC Diasporas, | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: AHRC Diasporas, Migration and Identities - Call for Proposals for Research Networks and Workshops and Small Research Grants MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan For information... Get cracking, folks... P.O'S. From: Jennifer WOODWARD J.Woodward[at]ahrc.ac.uk Subject: AHRC Diasporas, Migration and Identities - Call for Proposals for Research Networks and Workshops and Small Research Grants Dear colleague, We are now pleased to announce the calls for proposals to the Diasporas, Migration and Identities Programme, for the Research Networks and Workshops and Small Research Grants schemes. The details of the two schemes, guidance notes, application forms, and nominated assessment forms are now available on our website at www.ahrc.ac.uk/dmi, along with the full Diasporas, Migration and Identities Programme Specification and a Frequently Asked Questions document. Please note that the closing date for applications to both of these schemes is 5pm on Friday 24th June 2005. There will be one deadline only for both of these schemes. The call for proposals to the Diasporas, Migration and Identities Large Research Grants scheme will be made separately in October/November 2005. Thank you for your continued interest in the programme and best wishes, Jenny Woodward Research Awards Officer Arts and Humanities Research Council 1st Floor, Whitefriars, Lewins Mead Bristol, BS1 2AE Tel. 0117 9876665 (direct) Tel. 0117 9876500 (switchboard) Fax: 0117 9876600 http://www.ahrc.ac.uk | |
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5749 | 11 May 2005 11:31 |
Date: Wed, 11 May 2005 11:31:51 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
CFP The Irish Atlantic 2 | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: CFP The Irish Atlantic 2 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan I do want to congratulate Jason King and his colleagues on this initiative, and I commend it to the house... The swift rise of 'Atlantic Studies' has been interesting to watch - and now of course we have the H-Atlantic email list, part of H-Net. As an Atlantic Studies watcher I have said, sourly, that sometimes Atlantic Studies seemed to be a way of talking about slavery without talking about slavery. The Atlantic Studies agenda can be a strange one. Certainly there seemed sometimes to be a feeling that we who study the Irish were somehow not part of Atlantic Studies, a feeling of (we have commented about this in other areas, and I think we are allowed to whine in private, amongst ourselves) of knocking on doors that did not want to be opened. Yet, Ireland is in the Atlantic - and it would have to be a very odd definition of 'Atlantic Studies' that did not include Ireland. So, I think this initiative by Jason is interesting, timely, bold - yes, let is pitch our tents in the middle of the Atlantic... Paddy O'Sullivan -----Original Message----- From: Jason King jkingk[at]yahoo.com Call For Papers: The Irish Atlantic: Intercultural Contact and Conflict At the invitation of Cambridge Scholars Press, a proposal for an edited collection of essays, provisionally entitled The Irish Atlantic: Intercultural Contact and Conflict, will be submitted for publication. The edited collection will consist of a mixture of selected proceedings from the Canadian Association for Irish Studies (CAIS) Conference on the theme of "Ireland and the Atlantic: Intercultural Contact and Conflict", to be held at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, June 22-25, 2005, as well as selected essays chosen from the submissions received from this targeted call for papers. Submissions in relation to the following areas are particularly welcome: Anthropological, cultural, geographical, historical, literary, and sociological analyses of the Irish Atlantic that focus on the interrelation between the collective experience of migration and Irish perceptions of modernization and modernity, especially ones that seek to build upon, engage with, or modify Paul Gilroy's conceptual framework of "The Black Atlantic" and/or Linebaugh and Rediker's idea of a "Revolutionary Atlantic". Anthropological, cultural, geographical, historical, literary, and sociological analyses of the interrelations between Irish migrants and First Nations or indigenous peoples in North, Central, and South America. The racialization of the Irish in a Trans-Atlantic context, and Irish collective experiences of inter-cultural contact/conflict with other ethnic groups, such as African-Americans, French-Canadiens, Latin Americans, and others. The formation, inculcation, and transmission of Irish diasporic communities, forms of consciousness, and constructions of trans-national identity across the Atlantic and over a period of generations. The diffusion, adaptation, and transference of Irish cultural, linguistic, and literary forms across the Atlantic. Anthropological, cultural, geographical, historical, literary, and sociological analyses of the Irish immigrant experience in North, Central, and South America. The formation and institutionalization of migratory routes between Ireland and any destination in the North, Central, or Southern Atlantic sphere While submissions in these areas will be prioritized for the edited collection, any proposal that reasonably addresses the topic of the Irish Atlantic will be seriously considered for publication in the volume. Submitted essays should be up to approx. 6000 words in length (including notes etc.) and should follow either the MLA Style Sheet (literatures and languages) or the *Chicago Manual of Style* (other disciplines). The author's name should appear only on the cover sheet in order to facilitate blind vetting, and all submissions will be refereed and evaluated in terms of their suitability for the edited collection. Please send two hard copies and one electronic copy, by *1 August 2005*, to: Dr. Jason King English Department National University of Ireland, Maynooth Maynooth, County Kildare E-mail enquiries: jkingk[at]yahoo.com | |
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5750 | 11 May 2005 12:19 |
Date: Wed, 11 May 2005 12:19:05 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Article, The world's first automobile fatality | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Article, The world's first automobile fatality MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan There is something of a tradition, amongst popular and popularising historians of various groups, of claiming various first achievements or milestones for their particular group. So, I am often told of various Irish 'firsts'. Here is an account of a rather melancholy Irish first, in the journal Accident Analysis & Prevention. The victim was Mary Ward, nee King, born 1827, Ballylin, Co. Offaly. She was a noted scientist in her own right, and a poet. P.O'S. Accident Analysis & Prevention Article in Press, Corrected Proof - Note to users Copyright C 2005 Published by Elsevier Ltd. The world's first automobile fatality Isabelle Fallon and Desmond O'Neill Department of Medical Gerontology, Trinity College Dublin, Adelaide and Meath Hospital Dublin, Dublin 24, Ireland Received 4 February 2005; accepted 24 February 2005. Available online 7 April 2005. Abstract The first recorded automobile fatality occurred in a small town in the Irish Midlands in 1869. Mary Ward, a celebrated microscopist, artist, astronomer and naturalist, fell from a steam carriage and died after crush injuries from its heavy iron wheels. The story of first automobile fatality characterizes the individual tragedy that is each premature death. It also illuminates the story of a remarkable Victorian scientific family. Among their many achievements was the building of a reflector telescope in the heart of rural Ireland that was the largest in the world for 74 years. Keywords: Automobiles; Accidents; Traffic; History of medicine | |
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5751 | 16 May 2005 14:28 |
Date: Mon, 16 May 2005 14:28:28 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
New Book, Marshall, English, | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: New Book, Marshall, English, Irish and Irish-American Pioneer Settlers in Nineteenth-Century Brazil MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Email Patrick O'Sullivan News has reached us of the publication of Oliver Marshall's new book, = English, Irish and Irish-American Pioneer Settlers in Nineteenth-Century = Brazil... The contact point is... http://www.brazil.ox.ac.uk/ Basic information about the book can be found at... http://www.brazil.ox.ac.uk/publications.html There is a link there to a pretty pdf flyer, which you can print out and = distribute... http://www.brazil.ox.ac.uk/Pioneer%20Settlers%20Flyer.pdf And I have pasted in below the text of that flyer... Our congratulations to Oliver Marshall on the completion of this = interesting and important project, a genuine diaspora study... Patrick O'Sullivan Centre for Brazilian Studies =20 UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD =20 Britain and Brazil Monograph Series =20 English, Irish and Irish-American Pioneer Settlers in Nineteenth-Century = Brazil =20 by Oliver Marshall =20 Brazil is not usually associated with British agricultural immigrants, = but in the late 1860s and early 1870s great efforts were made to = stimulate interest in the country. An idealized image of Brazil was = created to help persuade dissatisfied Irish and English to pack up and = join settlement schemes in a country of which they had previously known = nothing. =20 This book examines why promoters of Brazilian land colonization schemes = specifically sought out English and Irish settlers. Agents representing = Brazil focused their attentions on the most impoverished members of = society in places where discontent ran high. Irish living in the slums = of New York City and the industrial English Midlands (Birmingham and = the =E2=80=98Black Country=E2=80=99) were particular targets of agents, = as were English farm labourers and poor town folk in central and = southwestern counties, especially Warwickshire, Oxfordshire, Dorset and = Gloucestershire. Most were attracted by promises of cheap land, work = and the hope of economic independence, but some also saw in Brazil a = possibility of creating a =E2=80=98New Ireland=E2=80=99 free of English = and Protestant influences.=20 Oliver Marshall=E2=80=99s English, Irish and Irish-American Pioneer = Settlers in Nineteenth-Century Brazil offers a vivid picture of the = migration process and new insights into linkages between England, = Ireland, the United States and Brazil. Focussing on the lives of = individual immigrants, this is one of the most detailed studies of life = in the Brazilian government=E2=80=99s isolated and under-funded = agricultural settlements in the provinces of Paran=C3=A1, Santa Catarina = and S=C3=A3o Paulo. =20 Oliver Marshall is a Research Associate of the Centre for Brazilian = Studies, University of Oxford. His previous publications include Brazil = in British and Irish Archives (Centre for Brazilian Studies, Oxford = 2003) and, as editor, English-Speaking Communities in Latin America = (Macmillan/ILAS, London 2000). =20 May 2005 xii + 323 pp, paperback 2 maps + 15 illustrations = 229x152mm ISBN 0-9544070-4-0=20 =C2=A320, =E2=82=AC30, $38 (plus postage and packaging) www.brazil.ox.ac.uk =20 | |
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5752 | 16 May 2005 14:31 |
Date: Mon, 16 May 2005 14:31:48 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
GAA in China | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: GAA in China MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit From: MacEinri, Piaras p.maceinri[at]ucc.ie Subject: GAA takes on China Never mind the world cup... Piaras Beijing the winner in third All-China GAA football finals Clifford Coonan in Beijing A local fireworks factory came to the rescue at the weekend of the organisers of the third All-China Gaelic Games Finals held in the Chinese capital, Beijing. The organisers of the tournament were finding it difficult to find regulation GAA goalposts. But one of the cities many fireworks factories manufactured the distinctive H-shaped posts, which were delivered to the Chaoyang stadium on Friday, hours before the games began. More than 130 men and women took part in the Gaelic football action with teams from Hong Kong, Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing battling it out for the All-China Cup in seven-a-side tournaments. The Beijing men's team saw off a strong Hong Kong side to win the title 2:2 to 0:3, dashing Hong Kong's hopes of making it three in a row. However, the Beijing women's team were overwhelmed by a strong contingent from Hong Kong, who won their third title in a row 3:3 to 1:1. "As you can see, we're gearing up to take the traditional Chinese sports like table tennis and badminton head on," said a jubilant Peter Goff, captain of the winning Beijing side. Although the founding members of most clubs in Asia are Irish, the game has a huge international appeal. Apart from Irish and Chinese, players from more than 20 countries including Tanzania, Thailand, Mauritius and Malaysia displayed their skills on Saturday. One of the Beijing GAA team's players, Li Pengtao (27), a marketing executive from northeastern Liaoning province, particularly enjoys the pace and physicality of the game. "Sometimes the tackles are very strong. It can be extremely tough. But it is also skilful because you use both your hands and your feet." GAA referee Peter O'Reilly was brought from Ireland for the event. He thought the Referee Council was joking when they asked him to officiate. "I was absolutely flabbergasted. There was a very good standard of football there. You have to work hard to get a standard like that," said O'Reilly. Fergal Power, captain of the Hong Kong side - unbeaten in China until this weekend - said the standard is improving all the time. "If you compare the level of playing today to something like the Asian Games three years ago, it's amazing." The Hong Kong GAA recently launched a weekly Gaelic football league, Asia's first. Irish Ambassador to China Declan Kelleher, guest of honour at the game, was impressed by the commitment of the players and the standard of play. "It was very enjoyable and keenly contested," he added. | |
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5753 | 16 May 2005 14:34 |
Date: Mon, 16 May 2005 14:34:22 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Ethnicity: ESRC PROGRAMME PROPOSAL UNDER DEVELOPMENT | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Ethnicity: ESRC PROGRAMME PROPOSAL UNDER DEVELOPMENT MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Email Patrick O'Sullivan For information... Advance warning... Note that 'Irish' are specifically mentioned. P.O'S. http://www.esrc.ac.uk/esrccontent/researchfunding/Ethnicity.asp Ethnicity: division or cohesion? New challenges in a changing world The ESRC is currently developing a new programme proposal on ethnicity research. Once developed, this proposal will be used to request up to = =A35m from the ESRC's Research Priorities Board to run a 5-year long programme = on cutting-edge, interdisciplinary research on ethnicity. It should be = noted that funding for this programme would only become available if the = proposal is accepted by the Research Priorities Board and Council. Brief programme description It is arguable that social and political action is increasingly = structured around 'race' and ethnicity at local, national and international levels. = The growth of international migrations fuelled by flows of asylum seekers = and refugees (often fleeing war or persecution, itself structured in terms = of ethnicity) dramatises the connections between these three key levels. September 11 has served further to dramatise already emergent trends, including the apparently increasing salience of politicised religion (at both global and local levels) whose relationship to ethnicity is only = weakly understood. There is, therefore, an urgent need to examine the extent to which existing theoretical frameworks, based around the notion of = 'racism', still offer analytic purchase when religion and other 'non-racial' = markers of difference may be more significant drivers of exclusion. These = include the key interactions between ethnicity and other dimensions of stratification such as gender and social class in 21st century. To what extent can we refine our theoretical understandings of ethnicity to = address both these challenging intellectual questions and pressing policy = dilemmas? Broad themes might include: * Personal troubles and public issues * Inclusion and exclusion =96 division and cohesion * Governance and citizenship * Local ethnicities in a global world Specific issues could be * Why are some differences defined as ethnic and others not? What implications do these definitions have for our understanding of majority ethnicities? How does ethnicity relate to 'race'? Can the answers help = us to problematise and deconstruct 'whiteness'? How are we to analyse the = place of sub-national (or state) communities such as Scots, Welsh and Irish? What light can be thrown on this by comparative analyses of sub-state (or national) communities elsewhere in the world =96 such as the Balkans, = the Indian sub-continent or the Middle East? * What governs claims and attributions of ethnicity? What is the significance of our inherited categorisation and measurement practices? = How, and under what circumstances, are distinctively ethnic groupings formed? = How do such groupings relate to religious and faith communities? Under what circumstances do asylum seekers utilise the ethnic route to regaining a sense of social positioning? * What is the relationship between ethnicity and other dimensions or stratification (or markers of difference) such as class and, critically, gender? * Why are ethnic processes characteristically presumed to have a = primary causal effect whenever groups categorised as ethically different are present? | |
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5754 | 16 May 2005 14:35 |
Date: Mon, 16 May 2005 14:35:51 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Article, The Geography of Religious Affiliation in Scotland | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Article, The Geography of Religious Affiliation in Scotland MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan For information... P.O'S. The Professional Geographer Volume 57 Issue 2 Page 235 - May 2005 doi:10.1111/j.0033-0124.2005.00475.x The Geography of Religious Affiliation in Scotland Michael Pacione1 Academic study of the relationships between geography and religion constitutes a long-established subfield of cultural geography. The tradition is particularly strong in the United States where the seminal work of the Berkeley School stimulated a wealth of research on mapping the religious landscapes of North America. Religion has received far less attention within British human geography, due, in part, to the marginal position of religion within cultural geography and, in particular, to the absence of reliable, comprehensive data on religious affiliation. The present research overcomes these ideological and methodological obstacles to advance knowledge of the geography of religion in the United Kingdom. Employing data from the latest Census of Population, embedded within an established tradition of mapping geographies of religion, the research provides detailed analysis of the geography of religious affiliation in Scotland at the advent of the twenty-first century. | |
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5755 | 16 May 2005 14:51 |
Date: Mon, 16 May 2005 14:51:36 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Article, The early Irish Stowe Missal's destination and function | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Article, The early Irish Stowe Missal's destination and function MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan The Stowe Missal was, of course, itself a wanderer. There is a description of it and an outline of its history on the R.I.A. web site... http://www.ria.ie/library+catalogue/stowe_missal.html A link takes you to, after a bit of twiddling, to the Irish Script On Screen site, where you can see the actual pages of the Missal, and other wonders... http://www.isos.dias.ie/ The Stowe Missal has become a central text for the various proponents and variations of 'Celtic Christianity'. And there are certainly issues there to consider. But see, more soberly... KERRY AND STOWE REVISITED By J.W. HUNWICKE http://www.ria.ie/publications/journals/ProcCI/2002/PC02/102C01a.html http://www.ria.ie/publications/journals/ProcCI/2002/PC02/PDF/102C01.pdf On The R.I.A. web site... P.O'S. Early Medieval Europe Volume 13 Issue 2 Page 179 - May 2005 doi:10.1111/j.1468-0254.2005.00154.x The early Irish Stowe Missal's destination and function Sven Meeder 1 In 1929 the great James Kenney argued that the early Irish Stowe Missal must have been produced as a private service-book which a priest could easily carry around with him, but in recent decades scholars have claimed, either explicitly or implicitly, a different purpose for it. The codicological arguments proposed by Kenney are nevertheless still valid and this paper will argue that close linguistic examination of the manuscript's liturgical contents supports the theory that the Stowe Missal was an itinerarium, a book for a travelling cleric And here is Hunwicke's Abstract... KERRY AND STOWE REVISITED By J.W. HUNWICKE [Received 10 September 1996. Read 18 January 2001. Published 21 June 2002.] ABSTRACT The Stowe Missal provides evidence for a liturgical culture in which the liturgical building was intended to house only the celebrant bishops and priests during the Missa Fidelium, the congregation, and probably the deacon, remaining outside except when (and if) they entered to receive the Lord's body and blood. The Stowe Missal and other Irish texts retain diaconal formulae that may have been used outside the building while the sacerdotal liturgy continued inside. 'Monastic' sites on the Iveragh Peninsula of County Kerry provide evidence supplementary to and convergent with that of the texts. The external congregation, often probably considerable, may have been arranged according to category at different distances from the building. Although an 'oratory' may have been small, the ritual and 'priestcraft' that took place within (although out of sight of the worshippers) is likely to have been anything but plain and simple. | |
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5756 | 17 May 2005 10:42 |
Date: Tue, 17 May 2005 10:42:49 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Reviews of Papastergiadis, The Turbulence of Migration: | |
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From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Reviews of Papastergiadis, The Turbulence of Migration: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan I have been asked for comment on Nikos Papastergiadis, The Turbulence of Migration. His book has been much cited by scholars of other migrations and diasporas - especially by those interested in the arts and cultural products generally... I'll tidy up my own notes, when I have a moment... In the meantime the following might be of interest... 1. Review in Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies The Turbulence of Migration: Globalization, Deterritorialization and Hybridity. (Reviews). (book review) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, July, 2000 by Kalra, Virinder S. Nikos Papastergiadis, The Turbulence of Migration: Globalization, Deterritorialization and Hybridity Cambridge: Polity Press, 1999, 256 pp., 50.00 [pounds sterling] h.b. (ISBN 0-7456-1430-2); 14.99 [pounds sterling] p.b. (ISBN 0-7456-1431-0) Migration has hovered on the edges of the social sciences and humanities as a concept of the utmost importance but one that has no easily found home. Nikos Papastergiadis' book The Turbulence of Migration reflects the breadth of the use of the term, flitting from engagements with visual artists to Marxist structural analysis. Full text available to those with access to Project Muse... 2. The turbulence of migration: globalization, deterritorialization and hybridity by Nikos Papastergiadis. Oxford, Polity Press, 2000. No. of pages: 256. ISBN 0 745 61430 2 (hardback), 0 745 614310 (paperback). Panos Hatziprokopiou International Journal of Population Geography Volume 8, Issue 6, 2002. Pages 429-430 Copyright C 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Full text available to those with access to Wiley InterScience. Which includes me (for those with ability to read between the lines). 3. REVIEW ESSAY published in: Global Networks 1 (4) Oct 2001, pp.389-398. Migration, mobility and globaloney: metaphors and rhetoric in the sociology of globalisation Adrian Favell Dept of Sociology University of California, Los Angeles Full text available at... http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/soc/faculty/favell/GLOB-NET.htm Favell is quite critical of Papastergiadis... And I think I would broadly agree with his criticisms. In general, I don't think that the problem of metaphor as explanation is solved by the introduction of a new metaphor, 'turbulence'... Which has little explanatory power... However, I think we must respect Papastergiadis' wish to bring the study of migration into the mainstream, and his sturdy connections with cultural theory... P.O'S. -- Patrick O'Sullivan Head of the Irish Diaspora Research Unit Email Patrick O'Sullivan Email Patrick O'Sullivan Personal Fax 0044 (0) 709 236 9050 Irish Diaspora Studies http://www.brad.ac.uk/acad/diaspora/ Irish Diaspora Net http://www.irishdiaspora.net Irish Diaspora Research Unit Department of Social Sciences and Humanities University of Bradford Bradford BD7 1DP Yorkshire England | |
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5757 | 17 May 2005 10:46 |
Date: Tue, 17 May 2005 10:46:06 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Papastergiadis, The Turbulence of Migration, TOC & Introduction | |
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From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Papastergiadis, The Turbulence of Migration, TOC & Introduction MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan Further to my earlier email, Reviews of Papastergiadis... The following has fallen into our hands... This email is quite a long one... P.O'S. TOC & Introduction to The Turbulence of Migration The Turbulence of Migration Globalization, Deterritorialization and Hybridity By Nikos Papastergiadis (Polity Press 2000) Content 1 Introduction: The Turbulence of Migration 2 Mapping Global Migration 3 The Ability to Move: Defining Migrants 4 Globalization and Migration 5 The Deterritorialization of Culture 6 The Limits of Cultural Translation 7 Philosophical Frameworks and the Politics of Cultural Difference 8 Tracing Hybridity in Theory 9 Conclusion: Diasporic Communities --- Introduction: The Turbulence of Migration The subjects of history, once the settled farmers and citizens, have now become the migrants, the refugees, the Gasterbeiter, the asylum seekers, the urban homeless. Migration, in it endless motion, surrounds and pervades almost all aspects of contemporary society. As has often been noted, the modern world is in a state of flux and turbulence. It is a system in which the circulation of people, resources and information follows multiple paths. The energy and barriers that either cause or deflect the contemporary patterns of movement have both obvious and hidden locations. While nothing is utterly random, the consequences of change are often far from predictable. For the most part, we seem to travel in this world without that invisible captain, who can see ahead and periodically warn us that, "it is necessary to return to our seat and fasten our security belts". The journey nowadays is particularly treacherous with financial storms which can break out in Hong Kong and have repercussions in New York, acid rains which are generated in the North drift South, the global emission of CFC gases directly effects the growth of the hole in the ozone layer above the Antartic, the threat of atomic fallout looms larger as the nuclear arsenals of thirty or more countries are positioned along jagged lines of brinkmanship, and the systemic flooding of the ranks of the unemployed as the chilling technology of economic rationalization bites into every locale. These are just some of the known sources of fear. There may be other storms on the horizon which we cannot name, let alone control, that force people to move. The turbulence of modern migration has destabilized the routes of movement and created uncertainty about the possibilities of settlement. The scale and complexity of movement that is occuring currently has never been witnessed before in history, and its consequences have exceeded earlier predictions. To take account of this excess, migration must be understood in a broad sense. I see it not just as a term referring to the plight of the 'burnt ones', the destitute others who have been displaced from their homelands. It is also a metaphor for the complex forces which are integral to the radical transformations of modernity. The world changes around us and we change with it, but in the modern period the process of change has also altered fundamental perceptions of time and space. Countless people are on the move and even those who have never left their homeland are moved by this restless epoch. These changes have a profound effect on the way we understand our sense of belonging in the world. It is impossible to give an exact location and date for the emergence of modernity. Modernity has had multiple birthplaces. Giddens's general definition of modernity, as referring to the institutional changes that took place somewhere around the 18th century, is about as accurate as one can get. Throughout the modern period, most people have understood their sense of belonging in terms of an allegiance to a nation state. This task of conferring clear and unambiguous forms of belonging was never a straightforward operation. Nation states were from the outset composed of people with different cultural identities. Among the central aims of the project of nation building, was the unification of these diverse peoples under a common identity, and the regulation of movement across their territorial borders. However, the complex patterns of movement across national boundaries and the articulation of new forms of identity by minority groups, that emerged in the past couple of decades, have destabilized the foundations of the nation state. This book seeks to examine the interconnected processes of globalization and migration and to explore their impact on the established notions of belonging. It seeks to question the dominant forms of citizenship and cultural identity which defined belonging according to national categories and exclusive practices of identification, by exploring the emergent forms of diasporic and hybrid identitites. There is a great urgency in our need to rethink the politics of identity. If, the historical and cultural field that shapes contemporary society is increasingly diverse and varied, then we can no longer exclusively focus on the traditions and institutions that have taken root in a given place over a long historical period. The identity of society has to reflect this process of mixture that emerges whenever two or more cultures meet. The political will to adopt such an approach towards migrant communities and minority groups has not been readily forthcoming. While there is a growing recognition that we are living in a far more turbulent world, a critical language and affirmative structures to address these changes have been lagging behind. A haunting paradox lurks at the centre of all claims to national autonomy: while the flows of global movement are proliferating, the fortification of national boundaries is becoming more vigilant. Every nation state is at once seeking to maximise the opportunities from trans-national corporations, and yet closing its doors to the forms of migration that these economic shifts stimulate. New pressures and new voices have emerged in the cultural and political landscape. Even countries like Germany and Japan, which have boasted of their ethnic homogeneity and aggresively restricted the right to citizenship, are increasingly confronted with the inevitability of seeing themselves as a multi-ethnic society. As nation states are losing more and more of their power to regulate activities within their territory, they are becoming increasingly aggressive about the defence of their borders. Tougher laws against asylum seekers, the rounding up of gypsies and ruthless eviction of 'economic migrants' are part of the ways in which governments vent their frustration in a world where they have seemingly lost control but dare not admit it. The need for global action to address local issues has never been more necessary, but there are few signs of supra-national cooperation, nor any new agencies with the powers and responsibilities to address human needs on a global scale. New Concepts for a Turbulent World The twin processes of globalization and migration have produced changes in the geo-political landscape that have compelled social scientists to re-think their conceptual frameworks. Since the 1970s, there has been a growing legitimacy of multicultural perspectives in places like Canada and Australia, which have questioned the dominant political categories for defining citizenship according to birthplace and residence within a nation state. Previously, most of the literature on migration was staked between the automatic assimilation and the gradual integration of the migrant into the host society. As 'ethnic elites' gained authority within the cultural and political circles of the dominant society, they began to argue in favour of new models for representing the process of cultural interaction, and to demonstrate the negative consequences of insisting upon the denial of the emergent forms of cultural identity. Multicultural perspectives on political rights and cultural exchange thus began to have a dynamic role in the reshaping of contemporary society. Since the 1980s, epecially in the American and French academy, the concept of class, had come under scrutiny. Conservative scholars like Francis Fukuyama saw the collapse of the Soviet Union as the ultimate triumph of liberalism, and the 'end of history' in terms of class struggle. Samuel Huntington took a more pessimistic view of the global picture, noting the ascendence of Islam, the rising influence of the East, and predicted cataclysmic 'clashes of civilization'. Structural changes were definitely occuring, the imperial orders were being dismantled and reconfigured, multi-ethnic societies were becoming the norm, and in contradistinction to these patrician scholars I believe that the more sober reappraisal of the fundamental social divisions, was offered by the new intellectual movements of feminism and postcolonialism. The concept of space, which in the 1990s was given greater theoretical significance by British geographers like Doreen Massey, added a crucial dimension in the rethinking of the relationship between migration and globalization. In the past there was a tendency to discuss migration in the mechanistic terms of causes and consequences. Space was often seen as a vacant category, reduced to a neutral stage upon which other forces were at play in the narratives of migration. Space was rarely seen as an active part in the field of identity formation. However, it is increasingly evident that contemporary migration has no single origin and no simple end. It is an ongoing process and needs to be seen as an open voyage. Departures and returns are rarely, if ever, final, and so it is important that we acknowledge the transformative effect of the journey, and in general recognise that space is a dynamic field in which identities are in a constant state of interaction. This would enable us to shift the discourse on migration from merely an explanation of either the external causes or the attribution of motivation, to an examination of the complex relationships and perceptual shifts that are being formed through the experience of movement. Just as in science there is the new consensus that every entity is composed of interacting forces, there is now an emerging debate in the humanities and social sciences that agency is in a state of mutual transformation with its surrounding structures. Hence, the cultural identity of the migrant will need to be seen as being partly formed by and in the journey, or on what Paul Virilio calls the "trajective", and not as a locked item that preceded the very act of movement. These political transformations and intellectual debates on nationalism and multiculturalism, class and agency, and space and time provide the broad horizons of this book. More specifically my aim is to explore the parameters of three questions. First, what are the available models for mapping migration and explaining social change? Second, how is migration linked to the broader social changes associated with globalization? Third, how do concepts like deterritorialization, translation, recognition and hybridity expand our understanding of identity and culture in plural societies? Throughout this book the term turbulence appears. I have adopted it from James Rosenau's work in international relations in order to break out of the mechanistic models for explaining migration. Turbulence is not just a useful adjective for describing the unsettling effect of an unexpected force that alters your course of movement, it is also a metaphor for the broader levels of interconnection and interdependency between the various forces that are in play in the modern world. The flows of migration across the globe are not explicable by any general theory. In the absence of structured patterns of global migration, with direct causes and effects, turbulence is the best formulation for the mobile processes of complex self-organization that are now occuring. These movements may appear chaotic but there is a logic and order within it. An analogy can be drawn with phenomena that were once thought to lack any structure, like turbulent flows, and which are now understood as possessing intricate patterns of interconnection. As Manuel de Landa noted "a turbulent flow is made out of a hierarchy of eddies and vortices inside more eddies and vortices." The internal structures of migration have often gone unnoticed. Both the drag effect that is produced on migrants as they are caught in the flow of movement, and the complex linkages that are generated to sustain a momentum are often overshadowed by the attention external forces. I am concerned with the inter-relationship between the energy for movement and the effects on its surrounding. What I aim to offer in this book is an account of how the experience of movement has produced novel forms of belonging and stimulated shifts in our understanding of contemporary culture. To address the contemporary problematic of migration, requires a new cross-disciplinary approach. Migration studies are no longer confined to the domain of sociology, demography, politics and economics. Key contributions have also been made by anthropology, history, psychology, geography, philosophy, cultural studies and art criticism. Disciplines like literary theory and political economy, which a decade ago were considered to be poles apart, have now discovered new borders of interest. These new studies have increasingly drawn attention to the complex links between diffuse levels of experience and deep structural changes. For instance, concepts like deterritorialization and hybridity do not reside exclusively in any particular discipline, they have served as 'bridging concepts', extending the parameters of analysis and highlighting a mode of explanation which is alert to the role of difference and contingency in contemporary society. The critical debates on globalization have also significant implications for both migration studies and the classical sociological and anthropological definitions of the boundaries of society and culture. From the moral questions of how judgements are posed across the boundaries of cultural difference , to the political debates on the future of the nation-state and the institutions of governance in a globalized world , there is now an extensive programme of re-thinking conceptual frameworks. Migration, in its contemporary form, also needs to be understood as an interminable and multifarious process. It could be seen as both the all too visible problem, and the invisible catalyst in what Habermas called 'the incomplete project of modernity'. Thus the aim of chapters 2 and 3 is to establish a conceptual framework which challenges some of the conventional definitions of migrants and seeks to present broader categories of belonging in modernity. The twin processes of globalization and migration have shifted the question of cultural identity from the margins to the center of contemporary debates. Cultural identity, in one form or another, preoccupies the construction of the public sphere. The definition of a criminal code, the provisions for public housing, the rules for immigration, the services established within health and welfare programmes, conception of madness and disability, the understanding and evaluation of artistic production, the formulation of academic curriculum are all issues which can no longer be addressed without some reference to the discourse of anti-racist discrimination, equal opportunity and affirmative action. Increased recognition and negotiation of cultural difference has challenged the very foundations of almost every institution or practice that shapes the contours of social life. Both the excesses of political correctness, and the ethnocentric backlash against multiculturalism, are symptoms of a deeper uncertainty as to how to measure and manage the viability of cultural differences within a given social space affected by globalizing forces. The structures of the local are increasingly formed by elements and ideas from distant sources. As ideas are rapidly imported from elsewhere and membership of local institutions is altered, the identity of society is subjected to new pressures. Globalization, as I argue in chapter 4, has raised new questions about the institutions of governance and exposed the limits of the nation state. The influence of transnational corporations, the integration of financial services within the networks of the global stock markets, the ceding of political power to supra-national bodies like the European Union, the deregulatory pressures of global competitiveness in the labour market, the emergence of new social movements to tackle global ecological issues, have all, for good or for bad, undermined the legitimacy and putative autonomy of the nation state. While the modern nation state demanded the undivided loyalty of its subjects, insisted on sovereignty over its territory, and sought to define the identity of its community in singular terms, it remained intrinsically resistant to the rights of ethnic minorities and diasporic subjectivities. Migration may have spawned new diasporic communities and facilitated the critique of the nation state, but this in itself has not necessarily produced greater levels of freedom and cross cultural understanding. For, if it was difficult to secure the terms by which minorities could find democratic forms of representation within the political system of the nation-state, it now seems infinitely more precarious under the conditions of globalization. The 'chaos' of Global Migration The current flows of migrant labour are now fundamentally different to earlier forms of mass migration. There have been dramatic shifts in the destinations of migration, restrictions on residency and strict limitations on settlement. The great metropolitan centers of the North and West; New York, Paris, London - in terms of migrant influx - have been eclipsed by the capitals of the East and South. Is this because the prospects of work are better elsewhere, or are there other reasons? There are currently more construction cranes in operation within the new economic zones of China than there are anywhere else in the world. The world's tallest building is neither a cathedral in Europe, nor an office block in New York, but the twin towers of Kuala Lumpa. Mexico City is swelling at a rate that is stretching its urban infrastructure to breaking point. After the Chernobyl nuclear disaster over 400,000 people were displaced; the ecology of their homelands ruined for centuries to come. Today people are on the move for a variety of reasons. NAFTA agreements force peasants to be on the move across the Americas; political and ethnic clashes have displaced millions from their homes in Africa; some of the most educated women in the Philippines accept exploitative contracts to work as housemaids in the Gulf States. Do all these people fit under the term migrant? The early mappings of international migrations were predominantly Eurocentric. They were defined either in relation to the colonial ventures from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century, or to the processes of industrialization and rapid urbanization in the late nineteenth and twentieth century. Between 1500 - 1850 approximately 10 million slaves were transported from Africa to the Americas. Between 1815 - 1925 over 25 million Britons were settled in predominantly urban areas of the colonies. The 'classical period' of migration referred to the trajectory of peasants, from the peripheral-rural based societies to the core-industrial countries of Western Europe, United States, Canada and Australia. For many migrants the first sight of their new country was caught from the deck of their ship. After the First World War, most migrants heading for the United States would have probably disembarked and gone through immigration procedures on Ellis Island, just off New York. The dock and hall of Ellis Island is now part of a museum. At the end of the twentieth century, the aeroplane has become the dominant means of mass transport. Today, migrants mostly arrive by descending into what Marc Auge calls, the "non places" of modern airports. The journey from a Third World village to a First World city can now be calculated in terms of hours. The greater levels of mobility in modernity, however, have not been reciprocated by more hospitable forms of reception. The current trends of global migration reveal a far more multidirectional phase. In this context, migration is neither directed to, nor exclusively generated by, the needs of the North and the West. The vast majority of migrants are no longer moving exclusively to the North and the West, but also between the new industrial epicenters within the South and the East. While for the earlier periods of migration, movement was generally mapped in linear terms, with clear coordinates between center and periphery, and definable axial routes, the current phase can best be described as turbulent, a fluid but structured movement, with multi-directional and reversible trajectories. The turbulence of migration is evident not only in the multiplicty of paths but also in the unpredictability of the changes associated with these movements. However, this has not meant that the pattern of movement is random and and the direction is totally open-ended. There are also strict barriers and firm counter-forces which either resist or exploit the flows of human movement, just as there are 'passengers' who carefully control their journeys rather than being swept toward unknown destinations. The relationship between work and migration has always been unstable and ambivalent. During the colonial period migrants from the 'mother country' were selectively encouraged to 'settle' in the 'new' societies. The rapid urban expansion and industrialization in the nineteenth century also demanded that some migrants were also recruited when certain needs arose, and expelled when their services were no longer deemed necessary. However, in the current geo-political climate these relationships have become even more jagged. Where migration is now regulated through contractual or negotiated terms, the civil and work rights of migrants are severely limited. Where migration is permitted for temporary periods, policing is extremely draconian and the abuse of human rights is rife. An increasing number of migrants are taking employment and entry into countries on an illegal basis. The migrant in all these circumstances effectively lives in a police-state - susceptible to exploitation and constantly in fear of punishment and deportation. Along with the shifts in global geo-politics there have been profound changes in the patterns of economic and cultural exchanges. The revolution in information technology, which has coincided with the restructuring of capitalist markets and the dismantling of the socialist command economies, has had a drastic impact on the forms of migrant labour. The new dogma of 'flexibility' in the workplace has meant that working class communities can no longer assume that employment can be guaranteed in their particular locale. Declining public transport and congested roads has also meant that the journey from home to work is often increasing. Commuting times of 2-3 hours a day is not uncommon, in Los Angeles and Moscow. Meanwhile politicians across the world are instructing their labour forces that, in order to be competitive in a global market and in a technologically advancing world, they must accept the inevitability of both the mobility of the workplace and the redundancy of traditional skills. The emergence of global media industries has also meant a greater degree of cultural interpenetration. Ideas developed in one place are increasingly promoted and circulated on a global scale. While this has not necessarily meant that the patterns of reception and identification with the global media forms have been homogeneous, it has implied that each locale has to both mediate signs at a greater rate and also confront a wider variety of codes. Contemporary cultural systems are criss-crossed by signals from diverse sources, with the result that a culture can no longer be understood as merely reflecting the particular practices which emerge within a specific territorial zone. Certain cultural practices may be concentrated or intensified within a given territory, but the politics of cultural ownership and the practices of dissemination are often extended beyond their territorial boundaries. It is from this perspective that globalization and migration have led to, what I describe in chapter 5, as the deterritorialization of culture. Migration, it must be stressed, is not a unique feature of our modern times. >From the perspective of the frantic mobility of the present it is tempting to imagine the past as a stable and relatively isolationist period. Yet, people have travelled vast distances throughout history. Examples of cross cultural exchanges, complex networks of trade and translocal identities are ever present throughout history. Anthropologists have painstakingly examined how different communities borrow religious symbols from each other and develop rituals for integrating different types of strangers. These strategies for internalizing difference have been remarkably elastic, varying from the incorporation of the 'prized' bride of a neighbouring community, to the introduction of a liminal position for the anthropologist. All cultures seem to have mechanisms for making a limited space for others, or for selectively absorbing strangers as 'one of their kind'. Archaeologists have also mapped extraordinary trading routes in ancient history. For instance, the discovery of traces of silk and cocaine in Egyptian tombs has suggested possible links between the Mediterranean, China and South America. Our knowledge of the extent of ancient sea travel is still very crude. Even with Thor Heyerdahl's brave reconstructions of the ancient techniques for trans-Atlantic and cross-Pacific routes, we have only begun to gain a glimpse of the persistence and breadth of pre-modern forms of long distance navigation. We do not know when the Egyptian influence on the islands began but the Phoenicians gradually took over. We know little of the origins of the Phoenicians or of the kind of ships they first constructed. Reed boats were originally used among their nearest neighbours east and south, and even west; for an engraved ring from ancient Crete shows a crescent-shaped reed boat with transverse lashings, mast and cabin. ... No one will ever be able to retrace the routes of all these vessels or reconstruct the relationships between all these diversified civilizations, intimately interlocked and yet clearly different as they were, partly imposed on earlier local cultures, and nourished by different rulers, in different geographical environments. Who will ever identify the mariners of the fourth century BC who carried a jar of gold and copper Mediterranean coins to Corvo Island in the outer Azores, a point nearer to North America than to Gilbraltar? Seeking fortune or refuge, thousands of ships left their home ports during antiquity, leaving no written records. ... True the people of America had not seen ribbed ships of wooden planks before the arrival of Columbus, but the people of Morocco and of the entire Mediterranean and of Mesopotamia had seen reed boats, like those that survive in America. However, until the invention of the 'tall ships', the railway, steamships, automobiles and ultimately the aeroplane, the frequency of movement, the volume of migrants, and the distance that could be crossed, was restricted. Today there are over 100 million international migrants and 27 million stateless refugees. This means that there are more people living in places that are outside their homeland than at any previous point in history. The turbulence of migration is not only evident in the sheer volume of migrants, but also by the emergence of new subjects, communication networks and forms of economic dependencies. The modern migrant no longer conforms to the stereotypical image of the male-urban-peasant. Women in manufacturing, electronic assembly lines and domestic workers are now at the frontline of global migration. Over 65% of the migrants from Sri Lanka and 78% from Indonesia are women. The value of remittances sent to the homelands of foreign workers has been estimated as being over $10 billion. These transfers of payments are second in value to the trade in crude oil. In places like the Philippines and Albania the major contributor to the national economy is accredited to the earnings of foreign workers. The paradigm of the nation-state as the principle anchor in the conferral of identity has also blinkered our understanding of migrant flows. Modernity and Migration This book does not seek to track the migration patterns of a specific group, nor does it measure the impact of migration on a particular society. The main concern is to examine the inter-relationships between modernity and migration. Thus the flows of movement are not identified in terms of their effects on a given time and place. Most studies on migration are also examinations of the boundaries and structures of belonging to a nation state. While there are many studies which have demonstrated the significant role of migrants in establishing 'new societies', few have made the larger claims that migration is a central force in the consitution of modernity. The significance of migration is neither confined to either the modest contribution of individual migrants, nor capture by the monumental structures of upheaval, but needs to be understood in a broader framework. The tension between movement and settlement is constitutive of modern life. As Derrida noted, the condition of exile is at the center of the nation's culture. By not confining the significance of migration in terms of the paths into and alterations within the nation state I am not denying the value or relevance of this body of scholarship. The nation state is still an active force in the regulation of migration. We do not live in a borderless world. The significance of migration in the formation of nation states has only begun to gain its proper recognition. My concern with the broader patterns of global migration is not driven by indifference to or ignorance of such tasks, but is motivated by a parallel need to outline the general context in which migration is occuring and to evaluate the available concepts for representing this phenomenon. The precise nexus between migration and modernity is still unclear. The metaphor of the journey, the figure of the stranger, and the experience of displacement, have been at the center of many of the cultural representations of modernity. Migrant artists and writers like Picasso and Joyce are among the most celebrated and perplexing figures of modernism. In chapter 6, I have attempted to expand the investigation into the relationship between an exilic consciousness and the modern sensibility, by looking at the contemporary aesthetic practices of borrowing and translation. Artists are not only among the most mobile members of a community, but they are often outriders of the transformations between the local and the global. Within social theory, however, the links between the experience of migration and the vision of modernity have remained obscured due to a tendency to conceptualise change as an external force. Throughout this century the 'sociological imagination' has manifested a tendency to become trapped within a mechanistic paradigm that, while preoccupied with the institutional and structural forces, lost sight of the subtle inter-subjective processes of everyday life. I wish to focus on a number of broad characteristics and changes that were initiated by modernity: the uneven transformation in the relationship between the urban and the rural, the valourization of technology over tradition, the oscillation between the social values of secularism and religion, the conflict between individuality and collectivity. Studies on modernity, whether they be empirical or interpretative, have been primarily investigations of the transition between these positions. Social scientists sought to measure change, to identify the coordinates or the symbols that mark the passage out of one stage and the emergence of another. But this attention to the beginnings and ends of the journey has often obscured the interminable process, the unending journey of modernity. Movement is not just the experience of shifting from place to place, it is also linked to our ability to imagine an alternative. The dream of a better life and the nightmares of loss are both expressed by the metaphor of the journey. It is not only our 'life narrative' but the very 'spirit of our time' which seems to be haunted by this metaphor. The journey of modernity - which sought to base action on the solid foundations of reason, which sought to build a rational order that would supersede all previous forms of waste, folly and mystification, which believed that truth and proof could substitute for dogma and religion - has turned out to be an endless march into the unknown. The future which was filled with such promises of progress, liberation and emancipation is now darkened by fear and insecurity. Zygmunt Bauman, one of the most astute and sober critics of the transformations of modernity, argues that the preset destination of modernity is now unattainable and that there has been a break in the vision of progress and control. His account of post-modernity is not an apocalyptic declaration of ending, nor a naive proclamation of succession, but a bitter-sweet appraisal of the way modernity has lost its direction and driving force. The measurement of modernity against its own goals has revealed that its aspirations and promises can no longer be plotted onto a linear graph, or situated in a privileged location. At this juncture, modernity does not seem to follow a clear path, progress drifts and tumbles. As Bauman noted, the distinctive feature of post-modernity is that while it can no longer predict what lies ahead, there is still the insistence that it is better to keep moving. Modernity is what it is - an obsessive march forward - not because it always wants more, but because it never gets enough; not because it grows more ambitious and adventurous, but because its adventures are bitter and its ambitions frustrated. The march must go on because any place of arrival is but a temporary station. No place is privileged, no place is better than another, as from no place the horizon is nearer than from any other. This is why the agitation and flurry lived out as a forward march; this is, indeed, why the Brownian movement seems to acquire a front and a rear, and restlessness a direction; it is the detritus of burnt-out fuels and the soot of extinct flames that mark the trajectories of progress. The restless trajectories of modernity can also be witnessed through the transformations in the representations of identity. Bauman notes that the modern construction of the human subject as a peripatetic being has shifted from a pilgrim to a tourist. This shift in subjectivity is not only linked to a destabilisation of the cultural codes that distinguish between places of origin and reverence, but to a broader rupture in the sense of belonging and the perception of destiny within an individual's life narrative. Home and shrine are no longer defined in terms of fixed location or within ritually bounded zones. All the coordinates of transition and destination in a life's passage are now defined as if everything is suspended along an infinite stage. We seem to be in a situation that says a great deal about where we have come from, a little about where it is we would like to go, but demonstrates almost no knowledge of why we are moving in the first place, or what it is that drives us on and away. The dynamic of displacement is intrinsic to migration and modernity, however the links between them have been largely overlooked. Migration was often interpreted as a transitional phase within modernity. As a consequence, the earlier sociological models, which shared the founding assumptions of modernity, have tended to represent migration in terms of trauma and disruption. The emphasis given to tracking the harsh economic, desperate political or brutal military forces that push people away from their homes, has often obscured the less tangible desires and dreams for transformation which gives migration its inner heading. Since the pioneering work of sociologists like Stephen Castles and Jean Martin in the 1970s, there has been an unequivocal demonstration of, both the central role played by economic and political structures in the regulation of migration, and the distorted levels of cultural exchange caused by the migrant's socio-economic inferiority within the host society. While the sociological mainstream emphasised the levels of stratification and integration, the critical schools stressed the contradictions and conflicts, but both positions understood the social as a total system. Migration was thus seen as either a necessary addition or an unwelcome burden to this system. The impact of migration was reduced to a temporary feature, rather than as an ongoing process which constitutes modernity. However, as the post-modern critiques of the social have attempted to redefine the boundaries and processes which shape society, there has been a further opportunity to reconceptualise the relationship between migration and modernity. By turning my attention to the forms of cultural survival, I have not sought to ignore the crucial role of bureaucratic and institutional networks which have influenced the possibility of minority groups gaining an economic and political grounding. I am keenly aware of the inequalities that cut into the position of migrants. Nevertheless my overriding aim is a critique of the kinds of identities and affiliations that emerge in and despite the polarization and conflict of globalization. There is no desire to join in with those facile and sponsored choruses which celebrate the vitality of cultural diversity while detaching it from all socio-economic references, rather there is an attempt to theorize both the small acts of cultural defiance and articulate the degrees of residual incommensurability which the dominant frameworks render inchoate and invisible. As I argue in chapter 7, the points of difference between competing cultural codes and the concepts which remain untranslatable matters a great deal, for they reveal not just a differing set of priorities, but also the seeds of rival worldviews. The Stranger in Modernity Of all the classical social theorists who identified the significance of migration, Georg Simmel was exceptional because he appreciated both the predicament and the sensibility of the stranger. However, even his account of the stranger does not provide us with a universal model for representing all the forms of estrangement generated by global migration. Simmel's representation of the stranger is limited in two fundamental ways. First, there is an almost imperceptible elision between the figure of the stranger, and the process of estrangement as a trope for creative and critical thinking. This ambiguous relationship between the figure of the stranger and the trope of estrangement has caused much confusion, especially in the recent debates on sexual and cultural difference. Second, Simmel's construction of the stranger is embedded within a series of dichotomies, us - them, modern - traditional, insider -outsider, and while the stranger oscillates between these positions, it presupposes that these prior positions are fixed and counter-posed according to a binary logic. In the current phases of global migration there is a need for a more complex framework of differentiation, one that is capable of addressing the shifting patterns of inclusion and exclusion. It is now commonplace for our neighbours to be strangers from distant countries, our security in the workplace to be dependent on the priorities of trans-national corporations, and our cultural knowledge to be formed through the interaction of signs taken from a variety of places. Our sense of identity is neither immune to nor above these transformations, but it is inextricably linked to them. However, the representation of identity has often been cast in far more narrow and restrictive terms. In particular, the identities of peasants, migrants and minorities were confined to traditional categories, reflecting primordial values and embodying exclusionist practices. Identity was defined in terms of a unique essence. Difference was presented in oppositional terms maintaining a convenient boundary between migrants and settlers. That model of representation and those boundaries are untenable in contemporary society. As I argue in chapter 8, there are now a number of contributors to the debates on identity who demonstrate the need to shift the conceptual framework in terms of an ongoing process of negotiating differences that cross and ground our life's narrative, rather than the rigid performance of a pre-determined script. Identity is not about determining a singular path that constantly closes down the horizons of becoming by pulling back everything to a single point of origin. While the role of the past is a significant force in the shaping of any identity, it doesn't have the exclusive power to determine all the possibilities for shaping identity in the present. Today the stereotypical images of the stranger as asylum seeker, gypsy, refugee often proceed precede the arrival of migrants, proliferating on the screens of media networks which in turn unsettle colonial poles of centre and periphery. The identity of the stranger is thus crucially affected by the media and its use of stereotypes. In this context the ambivalence that is projected against the stranger can take more extreme forms. What is also overlooked in many of the recent debates on identity politics is the relational aspects of identities. While it is necessary to recognise the specific contexts within which identities are constituted there must always be a concurrent process of connecting identity to a broader social consciousness. Edward Said has been particularly critical of the tendency toward exclusivism in identity politics. He argues that the politics of ethnic affirmation has been driven by the logic of displacement where one form of ethnic particularity competes with another for the position of authority. To counter this ingrown and defensive vision, Said offers a mode of being that he calls 'worldliness', which is a form of identity that emerges through the practice of connecting individual meanings of cultural differences within the "large, many-windowed house of human culture as a whole." Hybridity has become one of the most useful concepts for representing the meaning of cultural difference in identity. In the work of Homi Bhabha and Stuart Hall identity is defined as hybrid, not only to suggest that origins, influences and interests are multiple, complex and contradictory, but also to stress that our sense of self in this world is always incomplete. Self-image is formed in, not prior to, the process of interaction with others. This interpretation of identity as hybrid is a direct challenge to earlier quasi-scientific claims that hybrids were sterile, physically weak, mentally inferior and morally confused. The colonizing fantasies of the 'master race' as culturally and eugenically superior were underscored by a stigma that was projected on hybrids. This stigma has now been converted into a positive gain. In many of the recent applications of this concept, the figure of the hybrid is extended to serve as a 'bridging person', one that is both the benefactor of a cultural surplus, and the embodiment of a new synthesis. However, this benign view of hybridity has a number of limitations. By stressing the hybrid's positive achievement of reconciliation between cultural differences it blurs the very relational process that hybridity ought to highlight. In the rush to find an alternative to aggressive and chauvinistic forms of identity, the concept of hybridity has frequently been promoted to the position of a new form of global identity. This celebration of identity as hybridity has failed to pay sufficient attention to the deeper logic of accumulation and consumption that frames modern identity. In a society where the principle that dominates social relations is not reciprocity but consumption, hybridity is often reduced to the occasional experience of exotic commodities which can be repackaged to sustain the insatiable trade in new forms of cultural identity. Hybridity, as a metaphor for identity formation, can only function critically when the dual forces of movement and bridging, displacement and connection are seen as operating together. It is only when there is a consciousness of this oscillation between different positions and perspectives, that hybridity can offer a new understanding of identity. Communities of Difference In the final chapter of this book I conclude that the significance of migration for modern society will not be grasped if its meaning is confined to conventional definitions of physical movement and social settlement. As a consequence of the restless dynamism in modern society, the boundaries of community, as well as the more general sense of belonging, have changed radically. We need to understand the flows of cultural change from at least two perspectives: the movement of people, and the circulation of symbols. However, as noted earlier the introduction of foreign symbols and different cultural practices is no longer dependent on the physical presence of strangers. New channels of communication travel across established borders, meaning that cultural displacement can occur without the movement of people. This transformation in the cultural politics of belonging is clearly linked to the expansion of media technologies. Benedict Anderson astutely tracked the influence of the invention of the printing press and the mass literary projects that led to what he called the 'imagined community'. Once texts could be reproduced in greater volume and circulate across vast distances new affiliations between people could be formed. Communities were established with less regard for geographic proximity and more attention to a common language and shared ideals. People felt a belonging through a communion of certain structures of belief, rather than by the obligations and responsibilities that are drawn from day-to-day and face-to-face contact. The revolution initiated by 'print capitalism', which altered the sense of 'togetherness' as it magnified the possibilities for disseminating narratives of 'us' and 'them', has taken a further turn with the ascendancy of camera and computer based telecommunications. The increased domestic access to telephones, faxes and electronic mail, the diversity of uses for televisual screens from pleasure and information, to security and surveillance has led collectively to a proliferation of images and messages. These technological advances enabled optimists, like Marshall McLuhan, to prophecise over the birth of a new communitarianism. However, as McLuhan also noted, the essential drive of telecommunication is interruptive: "Nothing can be further from the spirit of the new technology than 'a place for everything and everything in its place'. You can't go home again." For him, this radical transformation of our relationship to space was meant to mark a liberation from the 'tyranny of distance', and provide the network for a single and integrated society that would occupy the whole planet. Such enthusiasm has not been shared by all the commentators on the new technologies of telecommunication. For Guy Debord, the promise of a global village was warily perceived as either a mirage or a new form of totalitarian surveillance. The illusion that home was everywhere in the spectacle was, for Debord underscored by the haunting feeling of being at home nowhere. He predicted that the access to the new media technologies would be highly selective, and their uses reflect the vested interests of existing holders of power. Whether or not we agree that the increasing role of the media has led to political emancipation or cultural enrichment, it is now beyond doubt that, for those who are 'hooked' into these circuits, there has been a series of transformations in the modalities of individual perception and collective memory. Paul Virilio also claimed that, as the screen dominates the post-industrial interior, the moral density of civic society is eviscerated. At the end of the 20th century, urban space loses its geopolitical reality to the exclusive benefit of systems of instantaneous deportation whose technological intensity ceaselessly upsets all of our social structures. These systems include the deportation of attention, of the human face-to-face and the urban vis-a-vis encounters at the level of human / machine interaction. In effect, all of this participation in a new 'post urban' and transnational kind of concentration. The links between modernity, migration and the media have remained relatively under theorized. However, Scott McQuire's recent work has excavated many of the deep philosophical and cultural paths that intersect at the junction of camera-technology, modernization and displacement. The age of the camera not only coincides with modernity but heightens out attention to the anxieties of the 'homeless subject'. The Limits of Explanation Throughout the 1960s and 70s, and even in the early 80s, there were vigorous debates within sociology over how migration could be explained. It was presumed that migration doesn't just happen, it has to be caused by something. There were two prevailing models. First, the voluntarist perspective which defined the movement in dual terms of an internal push out - due to the stagnation at home, and an external pull up - from the promise of greater opportunity elsewhere. Second, the structuralist political economy perspective, which charted migration according to the global division of central industrialized capitalist societies in the West and North, and peripheral peasant based societies in the East and South. There were inherent limitations to both of these perspectives, with the former overly stressing the individual's decision as rational calculation, while the latter resulted in a form of economic determinism that subordinated race and gender under the heading of class. These social divisions and their relationship to migration have now been addressed in a new series of debates on agency. However, despite a period of intensive theoretical contestation, the debates about the paradigms for understanding the causes of migration have lulled. Most contemporary accounts of migration are now either more empirical, or present an eclectic theoretical model which is composed of both voluntarist and structuralist concepts. The presentation of a new general theory of migration, or even an extension to the previous theoretical debates is lacking. This has left a serious gap in our knowledge of the turbulent dynamics of migration. For by continuing to explain migration purely in terms of cause and consequence of other forces, the social scientists have remained dependent on an out-dated mechanistic universe. Both the conservative-functionalist and the progressive-Marxist models have tended to explain human movement in terms of a water-pump system. The energy for movement was confined to the flows that were generated by the engines of industry and regulated by the valves of state policies. As industry demanded labour, governments turned valves, and the flow of migrants either contracted or expanded. This crude model is unable to accomodate what I call the auto-dynamics and multi-vectorial flows in this turbulent phase of migration. The social scientist's version of the water pump model of equilibrium, assumed that something will emerge only if there is an attending force to displace something else, or if there was a pre-existing vacuum from which it could be drawn. Such structuralist models were also transposed onto the subjectivities or the life narratives of migrants. To construct the stereotype of the 'migrant as victim' a number of social forces were given priority over the agency of the individual. Translated into cultural politics this means that the identity of the migrant was extracted from the fixed repertoire of stereotypes associated with the place of origin, that the space for the representation of different perspectives in modernity was finite, that the resources for mutual understanding amongst strangers was limited, and that the success of one interest was always at the expense of another. Narratives of migration in the social sciences have thus repeated the territorial competitiveness and binary oppositions that they were meant to critique. One of the crucial aims of this book is to present alternative models for conceptualising cultural exchange. The task of rethinking the social with cultural difference as a constitutive feature is only just beginning. This task will need to proceed on at least two levels, one which can attend to the changes in the configuration between the local and the global, and the other which develops a broader conceptual framework for representing the processes of cultural transformation. Given the enormity of this task, it might be worthwhile by beginning to note the steps that have already been taken. Many scholars have commented on the problems associated with administering the social policy of multiculturalism on a national basis. There is also growing debate about the contradiction in the political trajectories and the poverty of the philosophical framework for representing cultural difference. However, while the issues emerging from cultural difference may seem complex and intractable within the context of the nation state, how much more demanding do they become when viewed from a global perspective? What framework will structure the negotiation of cultural differences in the age of globalization? Under whose jurisdiction and with which tribunals will the rights of minorities be represented? The aim of this book is not so much to complete this task of re-thinking cultural identity in the context of global migration, but to lay down a number tracks that will assist in the understanding of the changes that are taking place all around us. The urgency of such a task is particularly evident in multicultural nation states like the United States and Australia. Three decades after the civil rights movement political leaders are now being compelled to confront the entrenched divisions and unacknowledged crimes perpetrated along the lines of cultural difference. While the indigenous peoples of Australia struggle with the legacy of genocide, one of the highest infant mortality rates in the world, countless unexplained deaths of young men while held in custody, the pursuit of land rights through the courts and compensation for the stolen generation of children which were taken away from their family in order to be assimilated into white society, the Prime Minister John Howard vacillated over his own moral duties. He responded to these burning claims by insisting that the current regime should not bear the burden of the past. Meanwhile he pursues a path of consolidating the interests of mining companies and pastoral leaseholders at the expense of the indigenous people. Across the Pacific Ocean, the University regent of California Ward Connely, who is black, and must surely be aware of the bitter statistic that for every black male that completes a university degree one hundred are sent to prison, dismissed President Bill Clinton's attempt to initiate a "great and unprecedented conversation about race", because he claimed that "where the American people want to go is beyond this whole issue of race." Within what sort of framework is it possible to get beyond race and re-think the issues of cultural difference? There is little evidence of success so far. The practices of exposing institutionalised racism are in themselves but the first steps towards dismantling the structures and categories of domination. New techniques and strategies are necessary for critiquing the hierarchies of power and justice. The liberal principles of equal opportunity seem inadequate to the task of achieving social equality and often conflict with their intrinsic claims of cultural neutrality. Should there be one form of identity which is central and dominates others? Does a minority position threaten the cohesion of the social? These questions have intensified as the multicultural debates begin to consider who defines the parameters of the social, the limits of tolerance, and what sort of identities are considered compatible with the codes of modern society. While not a new phenomenon, migration has never been as multi-directional, and the experience of displacement has never been as multi-dimensional as it is today. When the performance artist Guillermo Gomez-Pena, and founding member of the Border Arts Workshop, asked himself the question: 'Who am I?', his response - an itinerary of multiple and mixed places of origin - was not presented as a sign of an exotic biography, but as a metaphor for the contradictions and complexities of belonging. I wake up as a Mexican in US territory. With my Mexican psyche, my Mexican heart and my Mexican body, I have to make intelligible art for American audiences that know very little about my culture. This is my daily dilemma. I have to force myself to cross a border, and there is very little reciprocity from the people on the other side. I physically live between two cultures and two epochs. I have a little house in Mexico City, and one in New York, separated from each other by a thousand light-years in terms of culture. I also spend time in California. As a result, I am a Mexican part of the year, a Chicano the other part. I cross the border by foot, by car and by airplane. When I am on the Mexican side, I have strong artistic connections to Latin American urban pop culture and ritual traditions that are centuries old. When I am on the US side, I have access to high-technology and specialized information. When I cross back to Mexico, I get immersed in a rich counter-culture: the post-earthquake movement of opposition. When I return to the US, I am part of the inter and cross-cultural thinking emerging from the interstices of the US's ethnic milieus. My journey not only goes from South to North, but from the past to the future, from Spanish to English and from one side of myself to another. Cultural identity is increasingly in excess, or excluded from the traditional political categories of exclusive membership to a singular nation-state. But then, how to represent an identity that does not correspond to some form of national origin? The difficulty of grasping this complexity is linked to a series of fundamental questions which theorists are now confronting simultaneously: 'what is the future of the nation state?', 'what are the boundaries of society?', 'how do cultures survive?', and 'how do we understand agency?'. We now need new models not only because the density, velocity and multi-directionality of current migration flows have baffled analysts and discredited earlier theories, but because they also need to be related to the economic and cultural phases of globalization. The decentering and dematerialization of economic activity has summoned the spectre of 'placeless capital' and the 'homeless subject'. Vital decisions that affect local economies are increasingly made elsewhere. We have entered an era which Lash and Urry call the 'end of organised capital'. This turbulent state should not be confused with an evocation of so called 'postmodern indeterminacy'. It simply means that the nodal points of economic and social activity are neither integrated within the spatial coordinates nor synchronised according to the temporal rhythms of the nation state. The neat binarisms and linear oppositions of the colonialist and nationalist expansions are no longer the appropriate grids within which the contemporary flows can be plotted and mapped. The flows that these new formations have stimulated need to be mapped in terms of multi-variate circuits. In this context, the experience of migration may well be even more precarious than we have yet been able to imagine. Despite the rhetorical appeal of multiculturalism and the intellectual popularity of concepts like diaspora and hybridity, the horizon of the migrant's imaginary is increasingly filled with experiences of itinerancy, ghettoization and illegality. Displacement is not only a more common, but also a more complex experience. Both the normative boundaries, and physical location of members within communities, are on the move. Following from Derrida it may be worthwhile for the social sciences not only to map the trajectories and consequences of human movement, but to ask such fundamental questions as: "what gives the movement its start?" A different look at our turbulent times may also bring into question the available models of explanation, and expand our understanding of change beyond the mechanistic frameworks of causation and consequence. In an age of global migration we also need new social theories of flow and resistance, and cultural theories of difference and translation. We need a mode of investigation which can track these dispersed and reflexive practices of empowerment and negotiation. Migrant forms of belonging are rarely the mere duplication of traditional forms, or the blind adoption of modern practices. Through their actions and decisions migrants enter into a constant dialogue between past and present, near and far, foreign and familiar. A dialogical approach, rather than the monological and progressivist narratives which dominated the social sciences, may assist our future understanding of the complex ways migrants participate in and reshape the social worlds within which they move. Perhaps it is time for social scientists to face the more complex representation of reality that an artistic sensibility yields. In the early | |
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5758 | 17 May 2005 12:05 |
Date: Tue, 17 May 2005 12:05:49 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Review, Reginald Byron on The Irish Empire | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Review, Reginald Byron on The Irish Empire MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Email Patrick O'Sullivan Further to our recent emails about this item in the journal Visual Anthropology... The Irish Empire Publication: Visual Anthropology Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group Recency: Volume 18, Number 1/January-February 2005 It is indeed a review of the tv series, dvds, by Reginald Byron, now at the University of Wales - Swansea. It is a very favourable review indeed. One or two oddities - for example it sometimes expresses surprise at comments made by Kerby Miller onscreen, contrasting these remarks with those that might be made by another, imagined, 'Kerby Miller'. It quite legitimately brings into the discussion Reg Byron's own work on the Irish in the small towns of the USA. It concludes that the series 'challenges taken-for-granted ideas, some of them embued with a great deal of emotion, with tactful and graceful scholarship.' Anyone who wants a copy of this Review, as a pdf file, should email me and ask. P.O'S. -- Patrick O'Sullivan Head of the Irish Diaspora Research Unit Email Patrick O'Sullivan Email Patrick O'Sullivan Personal Fax 0044 (0) 709 236 9050 Irish Diaspora Studies http://www.brad.ac.uk/acad/diaspora/ Irish Diaspora Net http://www.irishdiaspora.net Irish Diaspora Research Unit Department of Social Sciences and Humanities University of Bradford Bradford BD7 1DP Yorkshire England | |
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5759 | 17 May 2005 12:10 |
Date: Tue, 17 May 2005 12:10:07 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
Irish Theatrical Diaspora conference, London, June 2005 | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: Irish Theatrical Diaspora conference, London, June 2005 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Email Patrick O'Sullivan Irish Theatrical Diaspora conference The second annual Irish Theatrical Diaspora Conference takes place at London's National Portrait Gallery next month, organised by Richard Cave = and Ben Levitas. Details are pasted below.=20 Registration forms may be downloaded from the IASIL conference news page (http://www.iasil.org/newsletter/confs.html) and details may also be = found on the ITD website - http://www.itd.tcd.ie/=20 ANNOUNCEMENT The Second Annual Conference of the Irish Theatrical Diaspora Project:=20 IRISH THEATRE IN ENGLAND (16th and 17th JUNE, 2005) at The National Portrait Gallery PROVISIONAL PROGRAMME OF LECTURES Thursday 16th June: 10.00: REGISTRATION 10.30: Welcome and Introductions 10.45: Steve Nicholson (University of Sheffield): =93Politics and = Censorship=94 11.30: COFFEE 11.45: Gilli Bush-Bailey (Royal Holloway, University of London): = =93Kitty Clive and Peg Woffington=94 AND Jerry Nolan (Irish Literary Society): = =93The English/Irish Ring and its Victorian Popularity=94 1.00: LUNCH 2.30: Nicholas Kent (Artistic Director of the Tricycle Theatre)** in discussion with Richard Cave 3.00: Elizabeth Schafer (Royal Holloway, University of London): =93An = Irish Jig: Edris Stannus, Ninette de Valois and the English Royal Ballet=94 3.30: TEA 3.45: Peter Kuch (University of New South Wales): =93Triumphs and Tours: = The Whiteheaded Boy in London=94 4.30: Yvonne McDevitt (Judith E Wilson Drama Fellow: University of Cambridge): =93On Directing Exiles by James Joyce=94 Friday 17th June: 10.30: Ben Levitas (Goldsmiths=92 College, University of London): = =93John Bull=92s Other Theatre=94 11.30: COFFEE 11.50: Michael McAteer (Queen=92s University, Belfast): =93=91The = Tortured Thing=92: Alienation and Fetishism in the Early Drama of W.B. Yeats=94 = AND Jonathan Statham (Royal Holloway, University of London): =93Folds in Dispersion: Yeatsian Remnants in London=94 1.00: LUNCH 2.30: Cathy Leeney: =93Mary Manning's Youth's the Season-? in London: = 1930s Not-So-Gay-Young-Things=94; Carmen Szabo: =93The Reception of Thomas = Kilroy's Field Day Plays in the UK: Double Cross and The Madame MacAdam = Travelling Theatre=94; AND Enrica Cerquoni: =93The Transience of the Visual Image = in Touring Theatre: Brien Friel's Dancing at Lughnasa=94. (All three = speakers are from University College, Dublin) 3.45: TEA 4.00: Tim Miles (Royal Holloway, University of London) =93Understanding Loyalty: The Reception in England of the work of Gary Mitchell=94 AND = Wallace McDowell (University of Warwick) =93The Plays of Gary Mitchell and = Cultural Self-Representation=94. 4.50: Closing Remarks A visit to the exhibition, =93Conquering England=94, curated for the = National Portrait Gallery by Fintan Cullen and Roy Foster, will be arranged at = the conclusion of the lecture programme on Friday 17th June. ** During the time of the conference, the Tricycle Theatre will be = staging a production by Kathy Burke for the Oxford Stage Company of BRENDAN = BEHAN=92S The Quare Fellow. A number of seats have been reserved for members of = the conference for the performance on the Thursday evening (16th June at = 8.00 p.m.). Please fill in the appropriate portion of the registration form, = if you wish to reserve a ticket. The cost of reserving a ticket (=A315.00) = will be additional to the conference fee. The theatre has an excellent Bistro = and Bar for pre-performance refreshments/meals. Conference Fee: =A325.00 (Concessions: =A315.00); Single Day: =A315.00 (Concessions: =A310.00) The fee will include all lectures and = refreshments (but not lunches). Further enquiries: j.statham[at]rhul.ac.uk (email) OR 01273-480113 (phone) | |
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5760 | 17 May 2005 13:34 |
Date: Tue, 17 May 2005 13:34:37 +0100
Reply-To: Patrick O'Sullivan | |
SSNCI Conference, | |
Sender: The Irish Diaspora Studies List
From: Patrick O'Sullivan Subject: SSNCI Conference, Land and Landscape in Nineteenth-Century Ireland, Limerick 2005 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable William Mulligan Jr. [billmulligan[at]murray-ky.net] For information... Society for the Study of=20 Nineteenth-Century Ireland Land and Landscape in Nineteenth-Century Ireland Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick 17-18 June 2005 Friday 17th June Registration: 1.30 =96 3.30, Refectory Panel I, room 202: 3.30 =96 5.00 =96 Chair: Margaret Kelleher, National University of Ireland, Maynooth Andrea Penz, Karl Franzens Universit=E4t, Graz: =91Island of Bliss: Nineteenth-century Austrian travel accounts of Ireland =96 a hybrid interpretation of an unknown land=92 Irene Furlong, University College Dublin: =91Protecting the Landscape: = no penny-in-the-slot at the Giant=92s Causeway=92 Glenn Hooper, Mary Immaculate College: =91Writing Home: Landscape, = Travel and the Domestication of Space in nineteenth-century Ireland=92 Panel II, room 203: 3.30 =96 5.00 =96 Chair: James Murphy, DePaul = University John McDonagh, Mary Immaculate College: =91A Fresh and Fair Land: Images = of Ireland in the Poetry of Thomas Davis=92 Ciara Boylan, Exeter College, Oxford: =91Improving Ireland: The Whately Professorship and the Irish Land Question=92 Larry Geary, National University of Ireland, Cork: =91William O=92Brien = and the =91lost opportunities of the Irish gentry=92=92 AGM, room 203: 5.30 =96 6.00 Convene at College Gates, 7.30, for Reception at The Georgian House, = Pery Square, and book-launch of James Murphy, ed., Evangelicals and Catholics = in Nineteenth-Century Ireland and Glenn Hooper, ed., Landscape and Empire, = by Dr. Sighle Breathnach-Lynch, National Gallery of Ireland Saturday 18th June Panel III, room 202: 9.00 =96 10.30 =96 Chair: William Mulligan, Murray = State University Sean Lysaght, Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology: =91The Romantic = Sublime in Lady Morgan=92s The Wild Irish Girl (1806)=92 Laura Dabundo, Kennesaw State University: =91Imagining the Irish = Landscape in novels by Maria Edgeworth and Sydney Owenson=92 Mary Pierse, National University of Ireland, Cork: =91Overlooking the mountains: Landscape as debating space in nineteenth-century Ireland=92 Panel IV, room 203: 9.00 =96 10.30 =96 Chair: Fintan Cullen, University = of Nottingham Francesca Benatti, National University of Ireland, Galway: =91Land and Landscape in the Dublin Penny Journal, 1832-33=92 James Murphy, DePaul University: =91=91Old lords of the soil=92: Charles = Lever=92s The O=92Donoghue (1845)=92 Siobhan Jones, National University of Ireland, Cork: =91The Cloven Foot = of Communism: Land Agitation and Issues of Ownership in Irish Loyalist Propaganda=92 Tea & Coffee, Refectory: 10.30 =96 11.00 Panel V, room 202: 11.00 =96 12.30 =96 Chair: Glenn Hooper, Mary = Immaculate College Jennifer Moore, University of Limerick: =91The transformation and = expansion of Limerick city=92s skyline: Medieval Fortress to Georgian Splendour=92 Gerry Sutton, National University of Ireland, Cork: =91Landlords during = the Plan of Campaign: the case of Arthur Hugh Smith-Barry=92 J. S. Wydenbach, Queen=92s University Belfast: =91Reading images of Land = and Landscape in Katherine Tynan=92s early fiction in the context of late nineteenth-century Ireland=92 Panel VI, room 203: 11.00 =96 12.30 =96 Chair: Riana O=92Dwyer, National University of Ireland, Galway Mark Minster, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: =91A Prophecy = Survives: The Aisling in English and the Construction of the Irish Landscape=92 Andrew Garavel, Santa Clara University: =91Land and Landscape in the = Fiction of Somerville and Ross=92 Tina O=92Toole, University of Limerick: =91The Lie of the Land: = Women=92s Writing on nineteenth-century Ireland=92 Lunch, Scott=92s Bar: 12.30 =96 2.00 =20 Panel VII, room 202: 2.00 =96 3.30 =96 Chair: Evelyn O=92Callaghan, = University of the West Indies, Barbados Marion Dowdican, University of Limerick: =91Creating a noble past: the = Design of Glenstal Castle=92 William Mulligan, Murray State University: =91Through a Different Lens: = The Irish Landscape as seen by Mining Promoters, 1835-1880=92 Matthew Potter, Limerick City Council: =91The Monsells and the Masseys: = Land and Landscape in the Clarina/Ballybrown area of County Limerick=92 Panel VIII, room 203: 2.00 =96 3.30 =96 Chair: Susan Egenolf, Texas A & = M Doreen O=92Connor, National University of Ireland, Galway: =91The = Expression of Violence through Supernaturalised Landscapes in early nineteenth-century Irish poetry=92 Toni Wein, California State University, Fresno: =91Wandering Home: = Charles Robert Maturin and the Subliming of Ireland=92 Patrick Maume, Royal Irish Academy: =91Handy Andy=92s Inheritance: = Samuel Lover, Whig Ideology, and the Liberal Stage-Irishman=92 Tea & Coffee, Refectory: 3.30 =96 4.00 Panel IX, room 202: 4.00 =96 5.30 =96 Chair: Sean Lysaght, GMIT = Castlebar Arthur Broomfield, Mary Immaculate College: =91Land, Faith, Meaning: the thetic phase deconstructed in Maria Edgeworth=92s Ormond=92 Eoin Flannery, Mary Immaculate College: =91Framing the Landscape: = Photography, Eviction and Modernity in nineteenth-century Ireland=92 Claire Cowart, Southeastern Louisiana University: =91Somerville and Ross = and the Land Acts=92 Panel X, room 203: 4.00 =96 5.30 =96 Chair: =DAna N=ED Bhroim=E9il, Mary = Immaculate College Susan Egenolf, Texas A & M: =91Revolutionary Landscapes: Salvator Rosa = and the Wild Irish Girl=92 Grace Heck, Augusta State University: =91Land and Liberation in = Yeats=92s Early Poetry=92 Mairin Ni Cheallaigh, University College Dublin: =91=91Mounds of = Rubbish=92 and the shades of extinct churches: perceptions of archaeological field monuments in nineteenth-century Ireland=92 Tea & Coffee, 5.30 =96 6.00, Refectory Plenary Lecture, room 202: 6.00 =96 7.00 =96 Chair: Glenn Hooper, Mary Immaculate College Prof. Fintan Cullen, University of Nottingham: =91Appropriating new Landscapes: the Irish in London=92 Convene at College Gates, 8.15, for departure to Clarion Hotel and Conference Dinner Close of Conference | |
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