Introduction: Framing the Questions The Citizenship Question: Of the State and Beyond The National Question: From the Indigenous to the Diasporic The Religious Question: The Sacred, the Cultural and the Political The Cosmopolitan Question: Situating the Human and Human Rights The Caring Question: The Emotional and the Political Concluding Remarks
Nira Yuval-Davis is Director of the Research Centre on Migration, Refugees and Belonging (CMRB) at The University of East London.
This is an in-depth examination of a slippery and contradictory
subject. Knowledge alone is not enough for this type of project. It
takes breaking out of narrow conceptual cages and unsettling what
we think of as stable meanings. The author brings all of this to
life in often unforgettable ways. -- Saskia Sassen
National identities were once taken largely for granted in social
science. Now they are part of an even more complex "politics of
belonging" that challenges both public affairs and the categories
of social science. Nira Yuval-Davis offers a nuanced account that
will be important for scholars and all those concerned with
contemporary politics. -- Craig Calhoun
Nira Yuval-Davis always pushes the feminist envelope. Here she
guides us through the thickets of five questions that preoccupy all
of us today , shining a bright light on the fraught dynamics of
"belonging." One of the innovations of The Politics of
Belonging is to introduce us to specific feminist groups and
movements tackling each one of these five thorny questions. I've
learnt a lot, as I always do when guided by Nira Yuval-Davis. --
Cynthia Enloe
Nira Yuval-Davis has written an important book on the politics of belonging. As a result of her anti-racist, socialist version of feminist political commitment she has always approached the issues of gender and gender relations intersectionally; this stands as a key feature of her work overall and of this particular book... Yuval- Davis thus provides a mapping of the 'politics of belonging' applied to different environments and she does it with exquisite sophistication and attention to detail by including a wide range of theories and authors.
-- Montserrat Guibernau, Queen Mary, University of LondonThis book is a major contribution to debates about how we can understand the intersections between multiple forms of identification and belonging which structure social relations. It argues that analyses and political projects which privilege particular axes of identity are always incomplete and limiting and thus always make for inadequate social science and dangerous politics... Yuval-Davis' scholarship is always concerned with understanding the social world in order to change it - in a more meaningful way than that captured by the now ubiquitous term 'impact'.
-- Ben Gidley, University of OxfordIn this book, the author outlines a specific approach to the infinite number of inherent difficulties in tackling the major categories of social division in modern societies, along with their normative significance... The sense of balance and differentiation is a constant throughout the analysis in this book and it is this, along with the general strength of argumentation, which gives the concluding arguments their weight. The capacities of individual and collective actors to negotiate the increasingly dynamic, complex and involved processes of changing attachment, value and meaning are at the core of Yuval-Davis's perspective upon the contemporary politics of belonging.
-- Kieran O'Connor![]() |
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