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Arab Diaspora Women
Author(s) -
Eugene Sensenig-Dabbous
Publication year - 1970
Publication title -
al-raida
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2226-4841
pISSN - 0259-9953
DOI - 10.32380/alrj.v0i0.200
Subject(s) - diaspora , artificiality , immigration , identity (music) , gender studies , genealogy , geography , power (physics) , emigration , ethnology , political science , sociology , history , archaeology , ecology , physics , quantum mechanics , acoustics , biology
Portraying the lives of North African and Middle Eastern women and girls in places as diverse as Argentina, Canada, France, India, and the United States accentuates the artificiality of the concept "Arab diaspora." As many of the articles in this file point out, a constructed sense of group identity was initially externally imposed. It was based more on the defining power of host societies than on any common denominators easily recognized by the respective Arab immigrant communities themselves.

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