This material will be of interest to scholars and students of anthropology, sociology, migration, urbanism and Iranian studies, as well as Iranian-Germans and those interested in the entanglement of global and local power relations The analysis of migrants’ agency tackles questions of independence and cooperation in kinship, associations, transnational entrepreneurship and cultural events within the context of the position of Germany and Iran in the global politico-economic landscape. Building on long-term ethnographic fieldwork and archival work, the book centers on differentiation, combining a diversity study with a focus on locality, with a transnational migration study, analysing strategies of capital creation and anthropological value theory. Taking the case of Hamburg-based Iranians, it traces evaluation processes in ties between professionals – artists and entrepreneurs – since the 1930s, examining migrants’ potential to act upon hierarchical structures. Summary: This book explores the interrelation between diversity in migrants’ internal relations and their experience of inequality in local and global contexts. Shiʻa cosmopolitanisms and conversions / Mara A. "For 'Ali is our ancestor" : Cham Sayyids' Shiʻa trajectories from Cambodia to Iran / Emiko Stock - 12. Limits of sectarianism : Shiʻism and ahl al-bayt Islam among Turkish migrant communities in Germany / Benjamin Weineck - 11. Ideas in motion : the transmission of Shiʻa knowledge in Sri Lanka / Harun Rasiah - 10. From a marginalised religious community in Iran to a government-sanctioned public interest foundation in Paris : remarks on the Ostad Elahi Foundation / Roswitha Badry - 9. "Still we long for Zaynab" : South Asian Shiʻites and transnational homelands under attack / Noor Zehra Zaidi - 8. Global networks, local concerns : investigating the impact of emerging technologies on Shiʻa religious leaders and constituencies / Robert J. Living najaf in London : diaspora, identity, and the sectarianisation of the Iraqi-Shiʻa subject / Emanuelle Degli Esposti - 6. Bektashism as a model and metaphor for "Balkan Islam" / Piro Rexhepi - 5. Mi corazón late Husayn : identity, politics and religion in a Shiʻa community in Buenos Aires / Mari-Sol García Somoza and Mayra Soledad Valcarcel - 4. Performing Shiʻism between Java and Qom : education and rituals / Chiara Formichi - 3. "My homeland is Husayn" : transnationalism and multilocality in Shiʻa contexts / Oliver Scharbrodt and Yafa Shanneik - 2. She researches the dynamics and trajectories of gender in Islam within the context of contemporary diasporic and transnational Muslim women's spaces, Print version: Shi'a minorities in the contemporary world, 1. Yafa Shanneik is Lecturer in Islamic Studies at the University of Birmingham. He is the author of Islam and the Bahai Faith: A Comparative Study of Muhammad Abduh and Abdul-Baha Abbas (London and New York: Routledge, 2008) and editor of the Yearbook of Muslims in Europe (Leiden: Brill). Oliver Scharbrodt is Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Chester. Those artists chosen for this study bring together the experiences, movements, and knowledge of populations of African descent both on the continent and dispersed throughout Europe and the Americans in order to emphasize transnational interactions between African cultural producers and sites." Building from these, she develops her neologism autochthonomy (aw-tok-ton-nuh-mee), which describes a practice of subjectivity and agency employed by African diasporic artists.
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She uses concepts derived from contemporary philosophical approaches to subjectivity that revise-and mostly discard-Hegelian principles in order to assert less Eurocentric approaches. In developing this approach, Chancy revisits the concept of "interpretive communities" from a distinctively African diasporic point of view. Its purpose is to reveal the contributions to ontology that such artists deploy. Not a work simply concerned with "racial rehabilitation" or "inclusion" within the dominant discourses of North America and Western Europe, it intends to serve as an intervention in race, Caribbean, African diasporic, and cultural studies by providing a radically new model for a culturally imbedded reading practice of contemporary works by African and African diasporic artists. Chancy focuses on the tropes of transnationalism, testimony and transmission within African diasporic texts. Summary: "In this book of textual and cultural studies, Myriam J.A.