TY - JOUR
T1 - 'Two Homelands and None'
T2 - Belonging, alienation, and everyday citizenship with the expatriated Greeks of Turkey
AU - Halstead, Huw
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© koninklijke brill nv, leiden, 2022.
PY - 2022/10
Y1 - 2022/10
N2 - For the expatriated Greeks of Istanbul and Imbros - some of whom have Greek citizenship, some Turkish - citizenship is neither an irrelevance nor a panacea. Turkish citizenship provided limited protection for ethnic Greeks in Turkey, and Greek citizenship could only go so far to ease the burdens of their ultimate emigration to Greece. Moreover, their expressions of self and identity are altogether more complicated and malleable than the apparent fixity and dichotomousness of statism. Nevertheless, citizenship looms large in their experiences, in both pragmatic and affective dimensions. The acquisition, loss and performance of citizenship - even the very materiality of identity documents - are intimately connected to expatriate efforts to navigate the everyday experience of migration and belonging. Whilst the significance of citizenship thus goes far beyond mere words on an official document, these formal aspects of citizenship are nevertheless a part of, not something apart from, the lived experience of citizenship.
AB - For the expatriated Greeks of Istanbul and Imbros - some of whom have Greek citizenship, some Turkish - citizenship is neither an irrelevance nor a panacea. Turkish citizenship provided limited protection for ethnic Greeks in Turkey, and Greek citizenship could only go so far to ease the burdens of their ultimate emigration to Greece. Moreover, their expressions of self and identity are altogether more complicated and malleable than the apparent fixity and dichotomousness of statism. Nevertheless, citizenship looms large in their experiences, in both pragmatic and affective dimensions. The acquisition, loss and performance of citizenship - even the very materiality of identity documents - are intimately connected to expatriate efforts to navigate the everyday experience of migration and belonging. Whilst the significance of citizenship thus goes far beyond mere words on an official document, these formal aspects of citizenship are nevertheless a part of, not something apart from, the lived experience of citizenship.
KW - dual citizenship
KW - ethnic identity
KW - everyday life
KW - Greece
KW - lived citizenship
KW - national identity
KW - Turkey
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85141282871&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1163/23519924-08030005
DO - 10.1163/23519924-08030005
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85141282871
VL - 8
SP - 432
EP - 456
JO - Journal of Migration History
JF - Journal of Migration History
SN - 2351-9924
IS - 3
ER -