2008
DOI: 10.1177/0921374007088055
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Representing the Homeland

Abstract: This article examines the representation of home among members of the Lebanese diaspora in New York, Montreal and Paris. Lebanese immigrants view home as both a concrete reality that is achieved physically or in relation with others and a symbolic reference point that moves beyond territorial boundaries. These overlapping strategies allow them to imagine and recreate their sense of home and belonging (to both a past and present) that provide sources of stability used in dealing with life in the diaspora. Howev… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…For these youth, then, their L2 education does not persuade them of their status as elites with access to the global economy. Further, violence was frequently-realised in these two subcorpora, in the Lebanese case probably reflecting experiences of the 2006 Israeli invasion (Abdelhady, 2008) and in the Hong Kong case the Umbrella Revolution (Fung, 2014). That is, these L2-educated youth perceive themselves as villagers, not overlords.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For these youth, then, their L2 education does not persuade them of their status as elites with access to the global economy. Further, violence was frequently-realised in these two subcorpora, in the Lebanese case probably reflecting experiences of the 2006 Israeli invasion (Abdelhady, 2008) and in the Hong Kong case the Umbrella Revolution (Fung, 2014). That is, these L2-educated youth perceive themselves as villagers, not overlords.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The second point of interest is that the percentage of non-voters is relatively very high in Lebanon due to the fact that high proportion of the enlisted voters on the official records may have already left the country for good. Recent estimates put the number of Lebanese emigrants at around one third of the population, but they would remain enlisted on the records [58,59], leading to participation rates varying historically around 40 − 50% of the registered voters on the national level [43,54,55]. This complicates the question of accurately determining the actual number of registered voters who might eventually want to vote in the elections.…”
Section: Discussion and Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They experience global identities, interacting digitally with the international diasporas created by the civil war and the 2006 Israeli invasion (Abdelhady, 2008). They are individualist, with their behaviour regulated more by their own likes and tastes than traditional social norms (Pulford, Johnson, & Awaida, 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%