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Diasporas

Concepts, Intersections, Identities

Diasporas( )
Contribution by: Lesser, Jeffrey
Bhabha, Homi
Mandaville, Peter
Lyons, Terrance
Dwyer, Claire
Vasquez, Manuel
Beswick, Jaine
Al-Ali, Doctor Nadje
Karim, Karim H.
Berghahn, Doctor Daniela
Cook, Ian
Modood, Tariq
Watanbe, Toshio
Gilroy, Paul
Remennick, Doctor Larissa
Baumann, Gerd
Baumann, Professor Martin
Richardson, David
Cohen, Professor Robin
Meinhof, Ulirke
Wills, Sara
Christiansen, Professor Flemming
Kosnick, Junior Professor Doctor Kira
Anand, Doctor Dibyesh
Raji, Sanaz
Christou, Anastasia
Flores, Juan
Wong, Madeleine
King, Professor Russell
Werbner, Pnina
Nasta, Susheila
Procter, Doctor James
Gilbert, Helen
Bernal, Victoria
Brah, Avtar
Tololyan, Khachig
Levitt, Peggy
Gillespie, Marie
Crang, Philip
Johnson, Mark
Hear, Nicholas Van
Kalra, Virinder
Huggan, Graham
Vertovec, Steven
Agnew, Vijay
Turner, Simon
Editor: Knott, Professor Kim
McLoughlin, Doctor Sean
ISBN:978-1-84277-947-7
Publication Date:Oct 2010
Publisher:Zed Books, Limited
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $134.95
Book Description:

Charts the ways in which global population movements have been seen through the lens of 'diaspora'.

Book Details
Pages:336
Detailed Subjects: Social Science / Human Geography
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6.22 x 9.41 x 0.85 Inches
Book Weight:1.34 Pounds
Author Biography
(Contribution by)
John Martin Flores was born in Alexandria, Virginia on September 29, 1943. He received a bachelor's degree in German-language studies at Queens College and a master's degree and Ph.D. in German literature at Yale University. He began teaching German at Stanford University in 1970. While there, he became involved in the movement to develop Chicano studies curriculums in California. He also changed his name to Juan.

In 1975, he returned to New York to work at Centro, where the Latino studies curriculum was being developed for the City University system. Through his work there, he was hired as a professor of black and Puerto Rican studies at Hunter College, where he taught before becoming a professor of social and cultural analysis at New York University in 2006. He was a leading theorist of Latin American studies and a pioneer in the field of "Nuyorican" culture, the arts and language of Puerto Ricans in New York.

He wrote more than a dozen books and edited many collections of essays. His books included From Bomba to Hip-Hop and The Diaspora Strikes Back. He died from complications of Guillain-Barre syndrome on December 2, 2014 at the age of 71.

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