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Diaspora is dedicated to the multidisciplinary study of the history, culture, social structure, politics and economics of both the traditional diasporas – Armenian, Greek, and Jewish – and those transnational dispersions which in the past three decades have chosen to identify themselves as ‘diasporas.’ These encompass groups ranging from the African-American to the Ukrainian-Canadian, from the Caribbean-British to the new East and South Asian diasporas.
published by
University of Toronto Pressviewing issue
Volume 17, Number 2, Summer 2008Table of Contents

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View 1984 and the Diasporic Politics of Aesthetics: Reconfigurations and New Constellations among Toronto’s Sikh Youth
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View Offline Politics / Online Shaming: Honor Codes, Modes of Resistance, and Responses to Sikh Gurdwara Politics
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View The Lateralization Method and Thomas A. Tweed’s Theory of Religion: Āyurveda and Hindu Migrants as Case Study
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ISSN | 1911-1568 |
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Print ISSN | 1044-2057 |
Launched on MUSE | 2014-03-26 |
Open Access | No |