Dis/Connected in Diaspora. An autoethnographic account of translating within language and relating across nation states

Natarajan R (2023)
The Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies. Special Issue: Diaspora Connections 11(1-2): 120–133.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Abstract / Bemerkung
Reflecting on the nature of my ethnographic research comprising open-ended biographical narrative interviews and participant observation, this article explores what transpires between people who are socialized in broadly similar postcolonial, multilingual, and multireligious environments yet meet for the first time away from “home”. What do they share, what divides them? Where do their paths converge, where do they fork? How do they connect to each other, wherein lies the disconnect? “Home”, in this case, is the Indian subcontinent––India for me and Sri Lanka for my interlocutors––and the new location abroad is Germany. In the context of academic research, both me as well as my research subjects detected several commonalities and differences, some overt and unwittingly acknowledged, but most covert and left unsaid. I argue that the dissimilarities, the distance perceived, and the disjunct between the life-worlds, real or imagined, enabled my connection to different women from Sri Lanka. Aged between 20 and 60, they had arrived through various modes as refugees, tourists, or marriage migrants from the 1980s onwards. Subsequently, they settled in Germany and saw themselves as a refugee community connected with fellow exiles across continents. This article takes up encounters with different interlocutors and illustrates the wide-ranging connections that materialized in the diaspora context. For the sake of narrative brevity, I shall focus on firstly, the shared language, Tamil, with different vocabularies, secondly, the insights as a translator and facilitator, and thirdly, the nature of diasporic connections and memories across nation states.
Stichworte
Language; Refugee Women; Connections; Citizenship
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Zeitschriftentitel
The Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies. Special Issue: Diaspora Connections
Band
11
Ausgabe
1-2
Seite(n)
120–133
ISSN
2643-8380
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2982538

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Natarajan R. Dis/Connected in Diaspora. An autoethnographic account of translating within language and relating across nation states. The Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies. Special Issue: Diaspora Connections. 2023;11(1-2):120–133.
Natarajan, R. (2023). Dis/Connected in Diaspora. An autoethnographic account of translating within language and relating across nation states. The Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies. Special Issue: Diaspora Connections, 11(1-2), 120–133. https://doi.org/doi: 10.5744/jgps.2023.1109
Natarajan, Radhika. 2023. “Dis/Connected in Diaspora. An autoethnographic account of translating within language and relating across nation states”. The Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies. Special Issue: Diaspora Connections 11 (1-2): 120–133.
Natarajan, R. (2023). Dis/Connected in Diaspora. An autoethnographic account of translating within language and relating across nation states. The Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies. Special Issue: Diaspora Connections 11, 120–133.
Natarajan, R., 2023. Dis/Connected in Diaspora. An autoethnographic account of translating within language and relating across nation states. The Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies. Special Issue: Diaspora Connections, 11(1-2), p 120–133.
R. Natarajan, “Dis/Connected in Diaspora. An autoethnographic account of translating within language and relating across nation states”, The Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies. Special Issue: Diaspora Connections, vol. 11, 2023, pp. 120–133.
Natarajan, R.: Dis/Connected in Diaspora. An autoethnographic account of translating within language and relating across nation states. The Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies. Special Issue: Diaspora Connections. 11, 120–133 (2023).
Natarajan, Radhika. “Dis/Connected in Diaspora. An autoethnographic account of translating within language and relating across nation states”. The Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies. Special Issue: Diaspora Connections 11.1-2 (2023): 120–133.
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