Videnskabelig artikel APR 2021
Domestication of difference
Udgivelsens forfattere:
- Sara Lei Sparre
- Lise Paulsen Galal
This article employs Huggan and Hage’s concept of “domestication” as a lens for understanding the ways in which various forms of civic engagement among Coptic, Assyrian and Chaldean Christian migrant communities in Denmark reproduce and contest a Danish model of citizenship, a particular construction of both the national subject and its others. While churches are a primary place for civic engagement among Middle Eastern Christians as an ethno-religious group, internally in the communities three modalities of civic engagement – ‘serving,’ ‘committing,’ and ‘consuming’ – are practiced. Each produces different manifestations of citizenship because they engage with the local, national and transnational differently. Christians of Middle Eastern origin are not publicly visible as political or activist groups as they, along with other immigrant groups, are expected to immerse themselves into the Danish model where ethnic and cultural differences are acknowledged but disregarded of their original context and its power relations.
Udgivelsens forfattere
- Sara Lei SparreLise Paulsen Galal
Om denne udgivelse
Publiceret i
Mashreq and Majar: Journal of Middle East and North African Migration Studies