TY - JOUR
T1 - Digitally enhanced? : mediated migration and ‘fourth wave’ Chileans in Australia
AU - Collin, Philippa
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - This paper examines the contemporary experience of migration for Chileans arriving in Australia in the last two decades. It specifically explores the increasing role of Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) and its mediating effects on experiences of departure, arrival, ‘being’ and ‘belonging’. In doing so, the paper considers some of the tensions between ‘hyper-digital’ transnationalism and dominant discourses of nationalism. The findings indicate diversity of experience, but highlight that these recent Chilean migrants utilise ICT to suspend and manage physical relocation and to engage both on and offline with wide and shallow networks of Chileans and non-Chileans in local and transnational spaces. At the same time, they reflect a more cultural, issues-based orientation towards the structural and discursive dimensions of migration in both ‘home’ and ‘host’ countries suggesting that ICT is imbricated in wider processes of distancing the ‘migrant’ from the national core. This highlights some of the possibilities and limitations of ‘hyper-digital’ transnationalism.
AB - This paper examines the contemporary experience of migration for Chileans arriving in Australia in the last two decades. It specifically explores the increasing role of Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) and its mediating effects on experiences of departure, arrival, ‘being’ and ‘belonging’. In doing so, the paper considers some of the tensions between ‘hyper-digital’ transnationalism and dominant discourses of nationalism. The findings indicate diversity of experience, but highlight that these recent Chilean migrants utilise ICT to suspend and manage physical relocation and to engage both on and offline with wide and shallow networks of Chileans and non-Chileans in local and transnational spaces. At the same time, they reflect a more cultural, issues-based orientation towards the structural and discursive dimensions of migration in both ‘home’ and ‘host’ countries suggesting that ICT is imbricated in wider processes of distancing the ‘migrant’ from the national core. This highlights some of the possibilities and limitations of ‘hyper-digital’ transnationalism.
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/551757
U2 - 10.1080/07256868.2014.944111
DO - 10.1080/07256868.2014.944111
M3 - Article
SN - 0725-6868
VL - 35
SP - 532
EP - 548
JO - Journal of Intercultural Studies
JF - Journal of Intercultural Studies
IS - 5
ER -