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" 'illegal' traveller "
Shahram Khosravi.
Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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218264
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Doc. No
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b130004
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Language of Document
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English
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Main Entry
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Khosravi, Shahram,1966-
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Title & Author
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'illegal' traveller : An auto-ethnography of borders /\ Shahram Khosravi.
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Publication Statement
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Basingstoke,: Palgrave Macmillan,, 2010.
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Series Statement
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Global ethics.
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Page. NO
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160 p.
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ISBN
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9780230281325 :
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: 023028132X :
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Notes
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Originally published in: 2010.
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Contents
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Introduction Accustomed Soil Border Guards and Border People The Community of Displacement The Invisible Border Homelessness We Borders Conclusion.
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Abstract
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Based on fieldwork among undocumented immigrants and asylum seekers Illegal Traveller offers a narrative of the polysemic nature of borders, border politics, and rituals and performances of border-crossing. Interjecting personal experiences into ethnographic writing it is 'a form of self-narrative that places the self within a social context'.
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"Shahram Khosravi's new book, 'Illegal' Traveller is really powerful and rich. One of the gems for me is the way the author clarifies the networks of migration from several perspectives. There are so many facets: the loneliness of making one's way alone and defenseless except for trying to keep one's wits; the political economies of the networks of smuggling at the lower levels; the human rights indignities of being stateless and vulnerable to rape, violence, extortion, and disappointment; and the ways in which small time smugglers also are liable to bankruptcy and inability always to calculate the margins. Also of course, the descriptions of the author's family as mid level khans with open houses both in Isfahan and Bakhtiari country, and the alienation of being Bakhtiari in Isfahan. Also the descriptions of Defense Colony in Delhi (the American Institute of Indian Studies has a house there) and the Topkapi area of Istanbul, places I have inhabited as well, albeit under very different circumstances. The minority experiences with the resonances that are invoked from Kafka, Benjamin, and the comparative references from the southern border of the U.S. (migrants from Mexico and Central America) as well as the borders around Fortress Europe make the book a cartography of the contemporary world, one that is only gradually being taken seriously by analysts as something quite other than an aberration." - Michael M. J. Fischer, Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Humanities, Professor of Anthropology and Science and Technology Studies MIT, USA.
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Subject
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Border crossing.
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Subject
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Immigrants' writings.
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Subject
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Illegal aliens-- Social conditions.
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Dewey Classification
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305.90691
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Added Entry
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SpringerLink (Online service)
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