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HISTORICAL CULTURE AND IMMIGRATION,
OR HOW TO REMEMBER AND
HOW TO FORGET OUR IMMIGRANT PASTS
A Forgetful Nation:
On Immigration and Cultural Identity in the United States.
By Ali Behdad. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2005. xvii + 212 pp.
Photos, notes, bibliography, and index. $74.95 (cloth); $21.95 (paper).
Diaspora, Memory, and Identity: A Search for Home. Edited
by Vijay Agnew. Toronto, Buffalo, and London: University of Toronto Press,
2005. x + 308 pp. Notes and bibliography. $65.00 (cloth); $29.95 (paper).
Ioanna Laliotou
University of Thessaly at Volos, Greece
These two books examine how the history of human mobility has contributed
to the formation of contemporary subjectivity and culture in the United States
and Canada. Although this is a very traditional topic in the fields of immigration
history and diaspora studies, both offer fresh perspectives by combining various
disciplinary approaches to back up with research some of the most central insights
of post-colonial and cultural studies theories. Their shared starting point is
the importance of memory and oblivion for the production of political identities
and national narratives. Diaspora, Memory, and Identity explores cultural memory
through immigrants' ways of remembering and representing their ethnic past and
heritage. A Forgetful Nation analyses how memory informs American nationalism
by elaborating the myth that the United States is a hospitable nation of immigrants.
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