Query Result Set
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:594Hits:20131682Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

  Hide Options
Sort Order Items / Page
ORAL HISTORIES (2) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   099637


Exiles and pioneers: oral histories of Greeks deported from the Caucasus to Kazakhstan in 1949 / Hionidou, Violetta   Journal Article
Hionidou, Violetta Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract The article examines the deportation of ethnic Greeks from the Caucasus in 1949, their establishment in Kazakhstan, and their lives there. The main source is 20 in-depth interviews conducted in Greater Athens, Greece, to which the majority of the deportees migrated at various dates. The main conclusion is that no trauma could be detected among either the first or the second generation of exiles. The reasons for the lack of trauma include the low mortality experienced during the deportations and the significant improvement in the deportees' living standards after their arrival in Central Asia.
Key Words Central Asia  Caucasus  Greeks  Oral Histories  Exiles  Pioneers 
Kaxakhstan 
        Export Export
2
ID:   098377


Routes of identity: malay liverpool and the limits of transnationalism / Bunnell, Tim   Journal Article
Bunnell, Tim Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract Rather than focusing on either bounded conceptions of migrant assimilation or unbounded transnational linkages, this paper situates migrant experiences in broader "routes of identity." In the case of Malay ex-seamen in Liverpool, UK, all of whom are now in their seventies or eighties, this has meant tracing life geographies extending back well over half a century. During the middle decades of the twentieth century when these men arrived in Liverpool, the city was a major seaport with longstanding maritime connections to Southeast Asia and across the Pacific. Drawing upon fieldwork carried out in Liverpool and Southeast Asia between 2003 and 2008, the paper gives attention to four geographical dimensions of the shifting identities of Liverpool-based Malay ex-seamen: (1) the always-already fluid and mobile nature of their identifications which preceded long-distance migration; (2) shifting political geographies of identity (re)formation, particularly the establishment of post-colonial national boundaries which cut across prior modes of identification; (3) historically variable constitutive geographies of long-distance interconnection, most notably the transition from maritime socioeconomic networks to a post-maritime period; and (4) social sites through which individual and collective identities are emplaced. The intention is to sketch these four different dimensions in such a way as to allow them to speak critically to issues of transnationalism and migrant identity beyond the specific case of Malays in Liverpool.
        Export Export