{"title":"走向散居民族主义历史地理的理论化:以爱尔兰散居为例","authors":"M. Boyle","doi":"10.1002/IJPG.240","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The strength of diasporic nationalism is characterised by an uneven historical geography, with different diasporic communities functioning as hotbeds of nationalism at different times. Mapping and explaining these historical geographies is of importance if the cultural and political experiences of diasporic existence are to be understood. It is towards a critical interrogation of the conceptual tools available to accomplish this task that this paper is dedicated. Based upon a reading of social scientific literature on the intensity of national affiliation among the nineteenth and early twentieth century Irish diaspora, and using Doreen Massey's recent advocacy of a new concept of space-time, the paper advances a case for a (re)theorisation of the phenomenon of diasporic nationalism. In so doing, it is hoped that it will contribute to ongoing efforts to (re)theorise migration in four main ways: firstly, by identifying a subject area that provides a forum for population geography researchers to continue their growing dialogue with social and cultural geographers on the one hand and political geographers on the other; secondly, by reviewing the contribution of migration research to work in this area to date; thirdly, by offering a (re)theorisation of diasporic nationalism that places some traditional concerns of population geography at its core; and finally, by calling upon migration researchers to engage (once again) with contemporary debates within human geography about time and space, and to reflect upon how the conceptions of time and space which inhere within their work, condition the way they define and understand the settlement experiences of migrant groups. 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It is towards a critical interrogation of the conceptual tools available to accomplish this task that this paper is dedicated. Based upon a reading of social scientific literature on the intensity of national affiliation among the nineteenth and early twentieth century Irish diaspora, and using Doreen Massey's recent advocacy of a new concept of space-time, the paper advances a case for a (re)theorisation of the phenomenon of diasporic nationalism. In so doing, it is hoped that it will contribute to ongoing efforts to (re)theorise migration in four main ways: firstly, by identifying a subject area that provides a forum for population geography researchers to continue their growing dialogue with social and cultural geographers on the one hand and political geographers on the other; secondly, by reviewing the contribution of migration research to work in this area to date; thirdly, by offering a (re)theorisation of diasporic nationalism that places some traditional concerns of population geography at its core; and finally, by calling upon migration researchers to engage (once again) with contemporary debates within human geography about time and space, and to reflect upon how the conceptions of time and space which inhere within their work, condition the way they define and understand the settlement experiences of migrant groups. 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引用次数: 29
摘要
流散民族主义的力量具有不均衡的历史地理特征,不同的流散社区在不同时期充当民族主义的温床。如果要理解流散存在的文化和政治经验,绘制和解释这些历史地理是很重要的。本文致力于对可用于完成这一任务的概念工具进行批判性的询问。基于对19世纪和20世纪初爱尔兰侨民的民族关系强度的社会科学文献的阅读,并利用多琳·梅西最近倡导的一个新的时空概念,本文提出了一个关于流散民族主义现象的(重新)理论化的案例。在这样做的过程中,希望它将有助于以四种主要方式(重新)理论化移徙的持续努力:首先,通过确定一个主题领域,为人口地理学研究人员提供一个论坛,一方面继续与社会和文化地理学家进行日益增长的对话,另一方面与政治地理学家进行对话;其次,通过回顾迄今为止移民研究对该领域工作的贡献;第三,通过对流散民族主义进行(重新)理论化,将一些传统的人口地理学问题置于其核心;最后,通过呼吁移民研究人员(再次)参与人文地理学中关于时间和空间的当代辩论,并反思他们工作中固有的时间和空间概念如何影响他们定义和理解移民群体定居经历的方式。版权¦# 169;2001 John Wiley and Sons, Ltd。
Towards a theorisation of the historical geography of nationalism in diasporas: the Irish diaspora as exemplar
The strength of diasporic nationalism is characterised by an uneven historical geography, with different diasporic communities functioning as hotbeds of nationalism at different times. Mapping and explaining these historical geographies is of importance if the cultural and political experiences of diasporic existence are to be understood. It is towards a critical interrogation of the conceptual tools available to accomplish this task that this paper is dedicated. Based upon a reading of social scientific literature on the intensity of national affiliation among the nineteenth and early twentieth century Irish diaspora, and using Doreen Massey's recent advocacy of a new concept of space-time, the paper advances a case for a (re)theorisation of the phenomenon of diasporic nationalism. In so doing, it is hoped that it will contribute to ongoing efforts to (re)theorise migration in four main ways: firstly, by identifying a subject area that provides a forum for population geography researchers to continue their growing dialogue with social and cultural geographers on the one hand and political geographers on the other; secondly, by reviewing the contribution of migration research to work in this area to date; thirdly, by offering a (re)theorisation of diasporic nationalism that places some traditional concerns of population geography at its core; and finally, by calling upon migration researchers to engage (once again) with contemporary debates within human geography about time and space, and to reflect upon how the conceptions of time and space which inhere within their work, condition the way they define and understand the settlement experiences of migrant groups. Copyright ¦#169; 2001 John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.