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A home far away? Religious identity and transnational relations in the Iranian diaspora

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49 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In this article, I address the influence of religious identity on the discourses of national belonging that traditionally dominate transnational discussions. Many of the children of the Iranian diaspora live in a state of exile from contemporary theocratic Iran. Living at a temporal and physical distance from the homeland has resulted in differential long-distance imaginings mediated by the diasporic context. Through the reflections of the children of Iranian migrants on the desire to 'return', a picture is painted of differing transnational trajectories divided along religious lines within the Iranian diaspora. For many of the second generation from a Muslim background their centrality in the discourses of national belonging, typified through the conflated 'Muslim Iranian' of media representations, feeds a desire for return. In contrast, for many second-generation Baha 'is their positionality as a minority, in both the homeland and the diaspora, combines with an eschatological problematizing of national belonging, to lead them away from Iran. In this article I draw on discussions about email communication in the diaspora(s) carried out as a part of research with the Iranian communities of London, Sydney and Vancouver.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)307-327
Number of pages21
JournalGlobal Networks : A Journal of Transnational Affairs
Volume7
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2007

Keywords

  • Baha'i
  • Iranian diaspora
  • children
  • communities
  • national identity
  • religion

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