什么是“反向侨民”,我们如何理解他们?

Christin Hess
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引用次数: 5

摘要

本文提出了来自两个当代散居者的经验证据,以支持正式返回祖国并不一定会像一些学者先前所建议的那样“使”散居者“解体”的论点。我认为,相反,所谓的反向散居形成过程发生了,对共同种族的移民在其名义上的“祖国”的文化适应产生了重要影响。本文关注的是后一个问题,主要是身份形成的过程以及归属感和家的概念,这在这种流散的“返乡”背景下特别有意义。它对前苏联移民到希腊和德国的希腊人和德国人进行了结构性比较。尽管这两个移民群体有着丰富而富有启发性的相似之处和重叠之处,但以前从未有人对他们进行过比较和对比。在简短的历史背景化之后,对假定的“历史家园”中的身份协商和归属的复杂过程进行了比较研究,为“反向”德国和希腊侨民在当代希腊和德国社会中发展(并且经常与之发生冲突)的观点提供了证据。这两种现象同时发生在两个国家,这表明反向侨民是一个重要的概念,未来需要学者更加关注。文章最后概述了我们如何根据现有的侨民定义来概念化反向侨民。我的研究材料包括在六年的时间里通过对俄罗斯、德国和希腊的移民和专家用俄语、德语和希腊语进行的81次半结构化访谈收集的深入的定性数据,嵌入民族学研究并辅以统计数据。
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What Are “Reverse Diasporas” and How Are We to Understand Them?
This article presents empirical evidence from two contemporary diasporas to support the thesis that formal return to the homeland does not necessarily “unmake” diasporas, as some scholars have previously suggested. I argue that, instead, so-called reverse diaspora formation processes take place, with important repercussions for the acculturation of co-ethnic immigrants in their nominal “homelands.” This article focuses on this latter issue, primarily on processes of identity formation and notions of belonging and home, which are particularly meaningful in the context of this diasporic “homecoming.” It draws on the structured comparison of the ethnic Greek and ethnic German diasporas from the former Soviet Union who moved to Greece and Germany after perestroika. Despite their rich and illuminating analogies and overlaps, these two diaspora groups have never been compared and contrasted before. After a brief historical contextualization, complicated processes of identity negotiation and belonging in the putative “historical homelands” are investigated comparatively, lending credence to the idea that “reverse” German and Greek diasporas have developed within (and often in conflict with) contemporary Greek and German societies. The fact that they occur simultaneously in both countries tends to suggest that the concept of reverse diaspora is an important one that needs closer attention from scholars in the future. The article concludes by outlining how we may conceptualize a reverse diaspora, based on existing definitions of diaspora. My research materials consist of in-depth qualitative data collected over the course of six years by means of eighty-one semi-structured interviews in Russian, German, and Greek with migrants and experts in Greece and Germany, embedded in ethno-graphic research and supplemented by statistical data.
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