Diaspora, Identity, and Belonging
Diasporic identity is shaped by dispersal and difference, holding together attachments to homeland and host society in often unsettled forms of belonging.
Definition
The study of how dispersed communities form and negotiate cultural identity and belonging across homeland, host society, and transnational ties.
Scope
This topic examines how diaspora reshapes cultural identity and belonging: Hall's account of identity as positioning and process, Brah's notion of diaspora space, and the double consciousness of those who live across cultures. It addresses memory, homeland, and the negotiation of multiple affiliations.
Core questions
- How does diaspora reshape identity and the sense of home?
- What is the relationship between roots and ongoing transformation?
- How do diasporic subjects negotiate multiple belongings?
Key theories
- Identity as positioning
- Hall argued that diasporic cultural identity is not an essence to be recovered but a positioning continually produced through history and difference.
- Diaspora space
- Avtar Brah proposed 'diaspora space' as the site where the experiences of those who migrate and those who stay are entangled, reframing belonging relationally.
History
Theories of diasporic identity developed in the 1990s as cultural studies engaged migration and postcoloniality. Hall's essay, Brah's diaspora space, and Gilroy's Black Atlantic reframed identity as plural and processual rather than fixed.
Debates
- Essence versus process
- Scholars debate whether diasporic identity rests on a recoverable origin or is continually constructed, with Hall favoring the latter.
Key figures
- Stuart Hall
- Avtar Brah
- Paul Gilroy
Related topics
Seminal works
- hall1990
- brah1996
Frequently asked questions
- How does diaspora affect identity?
- Living across cultures tends to make identity plural and negotiated, combining attachments to a homeland with the experience of a host society rather than fixing a single belonging.