The dramatic event that shook London in July 2005 has stirred up a debate that, for decades, has been rehearsing concepts like hybridity, multiethnic scenarios and images of multicultural worlds. While the academic-driven, media-fed focus on such issues has always been high and profitable, the local contexts characterised by such phenomena have been worryingly neglected, together with their political and ideological implications.
Midolo, E. D., Interethnic Alliances and Transdiasporic Appropriations: the New Sounds of the Metropolis, in Axford Barri, A. B., Huggins Richar, H. R. (ed.), Cultures and/of Globalization, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Cambridge 2011: 236- 247 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/37518]
Interethnic Alliances and Transdiasporic Appropriations: the New Sounds of the Metropolis
Midolo, Elena Dominique
2011
Abstract
The dramatic event that shook London in July 2005 has stirred up a debate that, for decades, has been rehearsing concepts like hybridity, multiethnic scenarios and images of multicultural worlds. While the academic-driven, media-fed focus on such issues has always been high and profitable, the local contexts characterised by such phenomena have been worryingly neglected, together with their political and ideological implications.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.