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Belonging in Translation
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This is the first book to investigate how migrants and migrant rights activists work together to generate new forms of citizenship identities through the use of language. Shindo's book is an origin...
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28 September 2019

This is the first book to investigate how migrants and migrant rights activists work together to generate new forms of citizenship identities through the use of language. Shindo's book is an original take on citizenship and community from the perspective of translation, and an alluring amalgamation of theory and detailed empirical analysis based on ethnographic case studies of Japan.
Price: $127.95
Pages: 208
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Bristol University Press
Series: Global Migration and Social Change
Publication Date:
28 September 2019
ISBN: 9781529201871
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Civics & Citizenship, Migration, immigration and emigration, POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration, Civics and citizenship
Reiko Shindo is Lecturer in International Relations in the School of Humanities at Coventry University. She is also an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Warwick. Her research focuses on citizenship and community and cuts across various fields of studies including political geography, migration studies, political theory, and Japanese studies.
Introduction
1.Language as a Contested Site of Belonging
2.Solidarity Activism? Rethinking Citizenship Through Inaudibility
3.Silence and the Image of Helplessness: The Challenge of Tozen Union
4.Rewriting the Meaning of Silence: Latin American Migrant Workers from Kanagawa City Union
5.The Hidden Space of Mediation: Migrant Volunteers, Immigration Lawyers, and Interpreters
6.Untranslatable Community: Toward a Gothic Way of Speaking
Conclusion