Franchise nations : theorising diaspora from outside In(dia)


Autoria(s): Leong, Susan
Contribuinte(s)

Pal, Adesh

Data(s)

01/01/2011

Resumo

Research on diaspora has long been dominated by approaches that centre on displacement, relocation, mixed identities, cultural hybridity, loss, yearning and disaffection. In this paper, I outline a fresh conceptual framework, franchise nation, which approaches the study of diaspora from the perspective of the state. What this framework allows is the study of the processes that states employ to woo, nurture and engage their diasporas so as to extend their sovereignty extra-territorially, ie. statecraft. The franchise nation concept draws on the notion of cultural expediency and complements two approaches that dominate the study of statecraft today: soft power and nation branding. However, the point of this is not, to borrow Gayatri Spivak’s words, to be either pro or anti-sovereign but rather to stay awake to how sovereignty is “invoked, extended, deterritorialised, aggregated, [and] abrogated” (2007). Far from suggesting the imminent arrival of a post-national period, the intention with the franchise nation concept is to explicate and better understand the complexities that inhabit the terrain between diaspora, home and host nation that allow and accompany the exercise of sovereignty from afar.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/41833/

Relação

http://asianaustralianstudies.org/home/news/post/conference-centre-for-indian-diaspora-and-cultural-studies-conference-patan-india-jan-2-4-2011/

Leong, Susan (2011) Franchise nations : theorising diaspora from outside In(dia). In Pal, Adesh (Ed.) Celebrating 50 Years of Swarnim Gujarat : the Role of Gujarati Diaspora, January 2-4, 2011, Ahmedabad, India. (Unpublished)

Fonte

Creative Industries Faculty; Journalism, Media & Communication

Palavras-Chave #200104 Media Studies #India #Diaspora #nation branding #soft power #franchise nation
Tipo

Conference Paper