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This study examines Turkish immigration to the United States and explores Turkish-American identity formations. Through a case study based in the New York metropolitan area, it investigates how the contestation and negotiation of Turkish ethnicity and Turkish-American identity is grounded in place and across space. It examines Turkish-Americaness in relation to Westerness, Muslimness, Arabness, Americaness and Turkishness. The study problematizes ethnic and racial labels such as Muslim Americans in the United States by examining the multiplicity, contextuality, complexity, fluidity and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This study examines Turkish immigration to the United States and explores Turkish-American identity formations. Through a case study based in the New York metropolitan area, it investigates how the contestation and negotiation of Turkish ethnicity and Turkish-American identity is grounded in place and across space. It examines Turkish-Americaness in relation to Westerness, Muslimness, Arabness, Americaness and Turkishness. The study problematizes ethnic and racial labels such as Muslim Americans in the United States by examining the multiplicity, contextuality, complexity, fluidity and temporarility of Turkish (and Muslim) identities and the role of different locales (the United States and Turkey) in the construction of Turkishness. The study investigates the role of Turkish and American politics and culture in the construction of Turkish-American identities, and focuses on generational, class and gender differences among Turkish Americans. It suggests that Turkish-American identities are spatially constituted as they represent a ground on which temporary and ever-changing boundaries are marked between inside and outside, the same and the other.
Autorenporträt
Ilhan Kaya is an associate professor of Geography at Dicle University in Turkey. He received his Ph.D from Florida State University. Kaya s dissertation is one of the first studies on Turkish immigration to the United States. His research interests include identity politics, social theory, geographic thought, and Muslim minorities in the West.