‘Two Homelands and None’: Belonging, Alienation, and Everyday Citizenship with the Expatriated Greeks of Turkey

IF 0.2 Q2 HISTORY
Huw Halstead
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

For the expatriated Greeks of Istanbul and Imbros – some of whom have Greek citizenship, some Turkish – citizenship is neither an irrelevance nor a panacea. Turkish citizenship provided limited protection for ethnic Greeks in Turkey, and Greek citizenship could only go so far to ease the burdens of their ultimate emigration to Greece. Moreover, their expressions of self and identity are altogether more complicated and malleable than the apparent fixity and dichotomousness of statism. Nevertheless, citizenship looms large in their experiences, in both pragmatic and affective dimensions. The acquisition, loss and performance of citizenship – even the very materiality of identity documents – are intimately connected to expatriate efforts to navigate the everyday experience of migration and belonging. Whilst the significance of citizenship thus goes far beyond mere words on an official document, these formal aspects of citizenship are nevertheless a part of, not something apart from, the lived experience of citizenship.
《两个家园与没有》:土耳其希腊侨民的归属、异化与日常公民权
对于移居伊斯坦布尔和伊姆布罗斯的希腊人——其中一些人拥有希腊国籍,一些人拥有土耳其国籍——公民身份既不是无关紧要的,也不是万灵药。土耳其公民身份为土耳其境内的希腊人提供了有限的保护,希腊公民身份只能减轻他们最终移民到希腊的负担。此外,他们对自我和身份的表达比国家主义表面上的固定性和二分性更复杂、更有可塑性。尽管如此,在他们的经历中,无论是在实用主义方面还是在情感方面,公民身份都显得很重要。公民身份的获得、丧失和履行- -甚至身份证件本身的重要性- -都与侨民在移民和归属的日常经历中所作的努力密切相关。虽然公民身份的重要性远远超出了官方文件上的文字,但公民身份的这些正式方面仍然是公民生活经验的一部分,而不是与之无关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Migration History
Journal of Migration History Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
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