American Karma: Race, Culture, and Identity in the Indian Diaspora

American Karma: Race, Culture, and Identity in the Indian Diaspora

by Sunil Bhatia
American Karma: Race, Culture, and Identity in the Indian Diaspora

American Karma: Race, Culture, and Identity in the Indian Diaspora

by Sunil Bhatia

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Overview

The Indian American community is one of the fastest growing immigrant communities in the U.S. Unlike previous generations, they are marked by a high degree of training as medical doctors, engineers, scientists, and university professors.
American Karma draws on participant observation and in-depth interviews to explore how these highly skilled professionals have been inserted into the racial dynamics of American society and transformed into “people of color.” Focusing on first-generation, middle-class Indians in American suburbia, it also sheds light on how these transnational immigrants themselves come to understand and negotiate their identities.
Bhatia forcefully contends that to fully understand migrant identity and cultural formation it is essential that psychologists and others think of selfhood as firmly intertwined with sociocultural factors such as colonialism, gender, language, immigration, and race-based immigration laws.
American Karma offers a new framework for thinking about the construction of selfhood and identity in the context of immigration. This innovative approach advances the field of psychology by incorporating critical issues related to the concept of culture, including race, power, and conflict, and will also provide key insights to those in anthropology, sociology, human development, and migrant studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814709191
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 08/01/2007
Series: Qualitative Studies in Psychology , #11
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 270
Sales rank: 831,070
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Sunil Bhatia is Associate Professor of Human Development at Connecticut College.

Table of Contents

AcknowledgmentsIntroduction 1 American Karma: Race, Place, and Identity in the Indian Diaspora 2 Qualitative Inquiry and Psychology: Doing Ethnography in Transnational Cultures 3 Des-Pardes in the American Suburbia: Narratives from the Suburban Indian Diaspora 4 Saris, Chutney Sandwiches, and “Thick Accents”: Constructing Difference 5 Racism and Glass Ceilings: Repositioning Difference6 Analyzing Assignations and Assertions: The Enigma of Brown Privilege 7 Imagining Homes: Identity in Transnational Diasporas Notes BibliographyIndex About the Author 

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Offers a new framework to examine selfhood and self identity in the context of immigration.”
-India New England

,

“Effectively blends identity theory and ethnography to examine the immigrant experience of first-generation, professional Indians. Provoking reflection on the racial dynamics and identity politics of American society, this work goes a long way towards humanizing what it means to be an immigrant in the United States.”
-Cynthia Lightfoot,Penn State University, Delaware County

“A productive move in developing new directions in the study of desire, agency, and ambiguous inequality among immigrant populations in the contemporary Americas.”
-Aisha Khan,New York University

“Bhatia offers a well historicised, theoretically astute analysis of the racial, cultural and ethnic identities of Indian immigrants and their families living in predominantly white suburbs of New England.”
-South Asian Diaspora

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