Lexington Books
Pages: 300
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0830-7 • Hardback • November 2004 • $124.00 • (£95.00)
978-0-7391-0952-6 • Paperback • November 2004 • $53.99 • (£42.00)
978-0-7391-5598-1 • eBook • November 2004 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Fran Markowitz teaches anthropology in the Department of Behavioral Sciences at Ben-Gurion University in Beersheva, Israel. Anders H. Stefansson is research assistant at the Institute of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
1 Part I: Homecomings to the Future: From Diasporic Mythographies to Social Projects of Return
2 The Home(s) of Homecomings
3 Part II: Homecomings of Immigrants and Refugees
4 Tigrayan Returnees' Notions of Home: Five Variations on a Theme
5 Sarajevo Suffering: Homecoming and the Hierarchy of Homeland Hardship
6 Extra Hungariam non est vita? The Relationships between Hungarian Immigrants and their Homeland
7 Part III: Blurried Homes, Blurred Diaspora-Homeland Boundaries
8 Homecoming to the Diaspora: Nation and State in Visits of Israelis to Morocco
9 From the Centers to the Periphery: "Repatriation" to an Armenian Homeland in the Twentieth Century
10 When Home Is Not the Homeland: The Case of Japanese Brazilian Ethnic Return Migration
11 Promised Land, Imagined Homelands: Ethiopian Jews' Immigration to Israel
12 Part IV: Contentious Homecomings
13 Transatlantic Dreaming: Slavery, Tourism, and Diasporic Encounters
14 Leaving Babylon to Come Home to Israel: Closing the Circle of the Black Diaspora
15 While Waiting for the Ferry to Cuba: Adio Kerida and the Goodbye that Isn't a Farewell
Homecomings is a welcome addition to the limited recent literature on return migration and homecoming experiences. ... an inspiring text that unravels the manu hidden layers of mobility, return and homeness.....
— Anastasia Christou, University of Sussex; Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
These studies, focusing on experiences of return migration in several continents, challenge assumptions about the relation of mobility to home. 'Homecomings' are never simply returns from exile, however, but also the unsettling of pasts and the making of futures.
— John Borneman, Princeton University
Homecomings is a welcome addition to the limited recent literature on return migration and homecoming experiences.... an inspiring text that unravels the manu hidden layers of mobility, return and homeness.
— Anastasia Christou, University of Sussex; Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies