The Locator -- [(subject = "Return migrants")]

30 records matched your query       


Record 5 | Previous Record | MARC Display | Next Record | Search Results
Author:
Al-Solaylee, Kamal, author.
Title:
Return : why we go back to where we come from / Kamal Al-Solaylee.
Edition:
First edition.
Publisher:
HarperCollins Publishers Ltd,
Copyright Date:
2021
Description:
311 pages ; 24 cm
Subject:
Al-Solaylee, Kamal.
Al-Solaylee, Kamal.
Reverse culture shock.
Return migration.
Return migration--Psychological aspects.
Return migrants.
Return migrants--Psychology.
Cross-cultural orientation.
Social adjustment.
Repatriation.
Cross-cultural orientation.
Repatriation.
Return migrants.
Return migration.
Return migration--Psychological aspects.
Reverse culture shock.
Social adjustment.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 295-311).
Contents:
Introduction: the language of home -- Part I: The age of return. Maybe -- The Basque country: a homeland for the Basques. A homeland for everyone? -- Jamaica: come from foreign -- Part II: There's no business like return business -- Norther Ireland: call my brother back -- Taiwan: the ABCs of return -- Part III: Ancestral homelands -- Ghana: the year of return -- Israel and the Palestinian territories: competing returns.
Summary:
"No matter where we come from, we all find ourselves at some point in our lives with an innate drive to return. We may have grown up in a country, or in a culture, or as descendants of a culture from outside of our now native country, but we all find our lives painted with the colours of our past, of our ancestry, of our culture. Even if someone has escaped a refugee camp in the land they have long called home and has found great fortune in a new, promised land, the longing to return always aches deeply within. Kamal Al-Solaylee, author of the bestselling and award-winning Intolerable: A Memoir of Extremes and Brown: What Being Brown in the World Today Means (for Everyone), yearns to return to his homeland of Yemen, now wrought by civil war, starvation, and daily violence, to be with his family. Yemen, as well as Cairo, another childhood home, call to him, even though he has found peace and prosperity on the calm shores of Toronto, Canada. He knows, despite his wish, that he can never return, as a gay man returning to a country with unfavourable views of his sexual orientation. But that does not stop him from battling within for the meaning of who he is and where he belongs. In Return, Al-Solaylee interviews dozens of people who have chosen to or who long to return, from the Basque who find themselves trapped as a culture within a culture; to the Irish who once fled to the world in great numbers and are now returning home; to Taiwanese who grew up speaking English and work as immigrant aliens in their own cultural homeland; to the Jamaicans of the Wind Rush generation, who forged a life in the United Kingdom over many decades only to be rewarded with flights back to a homeland that survives only in their imaginations; and Ghanaians who reverse the journey of the slave ships and find themselves entirely at home. Al-Solaylee does make a return of sorts himself, to the Middle East, visiting Israel and Lebanon and also Cairo to meet up with his sister, but finds his Arabic stilted and his mannerisms foreign, and the English language and western customs now his only cultural currency. Al-Solaylee shines in the pages of Return as he shares the intimate stories of others in his trademark fashion, expertly interviewing and relating to those caught up in a diaspora often not of their doing, longing for a home that may never be theirs again."-- Provided by publisher.
ISBN:
1443456152
9781443456159
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1227976789
Locations:
UNUX074 -- University of Northern Iowa - Rod Library (Cedar Falls)
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

Initiate Another SILO Locator Search

This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.