As Israel's former minister for the diaspora, he toured British universities and well understands the mortal moral sickness that now grips them. |
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Or it may be the removal of any self-consciousness that can often accompany public expression of Jewishness in the diaspora. |
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By way of contrast, Guillermo Kuitca draws on a family history of displacement and diaspora. |
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He was now virtually the ethnarch of all Armenians in the diaspora, but found time to write some 21 books and articles. |
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A forthright trialogue involving Africans, descendants in the diaspora, and whites to address the widespread fallout is critical. |
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By the same token the hulls come to embody notions of flight, diaspora, immigration and emigration. |
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The song is something of a social commentary, dealing with the issue of Haitian identity in the diaspora. |
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Enforced ethnic cleansing and poor economic prospects at home caused a diaspora which tested national flexibility. |
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It could be argued that Ross didn't visit enough places, since the diaspora is limited to Paris, London, Brazil, Toronto and Ghana. |
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In countries of the diaspora, such as Trinidad, it is the Ramayana that is the sacred text of first choice. |
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None of the sins of these people should be visited upon the members of the diaspora at large. |
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They are created and practiced in Africa as well as across the African diaspora. |
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It is these shared practices that enable the diaspora to create and critique its idea of community and home. |
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African Americans and black people from the diaspora often have great expectations for their first visit to Africa. |
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Campaign contributions and the votes of the diaspora are crucially important in home country politics. |
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The first stirrings came last week when it emerged Henry had gone beyond the normal Welsh diaspora to strengthen the squad. |
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The novel juxtaposes three stories of the effects of state violence on marginalized bodies across the African diaspora. |
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Seats are set aside in the House of Representatives for ethnic minorities and Croats in the diaspora. |
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Themes of emigration, pilgrimage, diaspora, exile and new homelands are woven into the psalms and canticles. |
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The term alien is used synonymously with diaspora, following custom in entrepreneurship studies. |
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Not knowing when Passover began, communities in the diaspora observed an additional day. |
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For almost three decades he has helped to build and sustain a transnational epistemic community dedicated to the study of the diaspora. |
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The term diaspora has come into vogue in the last decade because it captures the ambiguities of contemporary social belonging. |
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It may be home, but like the 90 million Scots of the diaspora, to me home is somewhere you leave. |
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Though it is rooted in the music of the black diaspora, I believe its closest correlation can be found in the African plastic arts themselves. |
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Well, I suppose the academic chaps would say I'm a product of the diaspora, rootless, not really at home anywhere. |
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The sacred and secular stories of South Asian music propel it along the path of diaspora. |
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This provided ample opportunity for a partisan war, one which would grow to near-mythic proportions for Lithuanians and the Lithuanian diaspora. |
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The south Asian diaspora in the United Kingdom comprises Indians, Sri Lankans, Pakistanis, and Bangladeshis. |
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In an increasingly globalising world, the concept of diaspora problematises the question of identity. |
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The answer is that living with uncertainty in the Land of our roots is still far superior to the security of being firmly established in the diaspora. |
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Apart from members of the diaspora investing back home, the government should help Indian industry set up base in countries where there is a significant Indian diaspora. |
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Sephardic culture was diasporic, indeed, all the more so because it formed from a previous diaspora, necessitated by the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 ce. |
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Then, there are the strained relations between the home country and the diaspora and the sometimes tense relations between the home country and the strong dominant neighbour. |
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The liturgical ecclesial community becomes a community in diaspora. |
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Listener feedback provides evidence of an international audience, with asynchronous access, largely among the diaspora of Welsh expatriates and their descendants. |
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One million Turkish Armenians were slaughtered, while the other million survivors were cast from their Anatolian homeland into a global diaspora that remains to this day. |
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As the syllabus states, Indian cinema has been an important site for the articulation of ideas about nation, class, caste, gender and sexuality, community, and diaspora. |
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The continued life of Acadian culture, now largely based in New Brunswick but reaching as far as its diaspora travels, is a testament to the show's message. |
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Dave mines the vernacular of popular culture and traditional imagery, filtering it through his contemporaneity as an artist of the South Asian diaspora. |
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It should be remembered that it was globalized racism which created the necessity for the supranational flag of diaspora and cultural nationalism. |
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The revolutionary contagion spread and the diaspora provided, at least in the American republic, a climate in which plots against the union thrived. |
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The answer is left unclear, but diaspora is certainly intended to be profitable. |
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The institutional structures of colonial India frequently provided models for the organization of Indian classical music, first in India and then beyond in the diaspora. |
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Or perhaps the diaspora of talent will re-form and succeed while the companies who ejected them collapse and disappear. |
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These international alliances, Edwards argues, constitute diaspora in practice, and that its inner workings can be most tangibly grasped in translation. |
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As the authors explore the uncharted spaces of diaspora subjectivity, they confront the unarticulated implications of vertigo as a cultural phenomenon. |
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You need to find the diaspora and tell them to give back something to South Africa, because they should be part of a strategy to improve the future of the country. |
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South Sudanese diaspora are immigrants who escaped Sudan in search of refuge in the neighboring countries and across the globe. |
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Marshall's meditations here encompassed many styles and mediums, while centering on themes of community, sociopolitical awareness, the African diaspora and black culture. |
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There is a notable Polish diaspora in the United States, Brazil, and Canada. |
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There are also many in other parts of the world, formed through diaspora, conversions, and missionary activity. |
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A decisive shift occurs, however, in diaspora Judaism, as shown particularly by 4Q Sapiential Work A and Wisdom of Solomon. |
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Reproductive structures of this species produce digitate ten-lobed seed scales, which likely functioned as helicopter-like diaspora. |
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The survival of Artzakh is the most important question and it dominates diaspora thinking. |
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Outside Ireland, football is mainly played among members of the Irish diaspora. |
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The dispersion of native Iraqis to other countries is known as the Iraqi diaspora. |
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Civil strife in the early 1990s greatly increased the size of the Somali diaspora, as many of the best educated Somalis left the country. |
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In the early 21st century, the descendants of the Highland diaspora far outnumber the population in Scotland. |
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However evidence has suggested the language remained in use on a colloquial level by Cornish diaspora and farmers and fisherman in the region. |
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Some collectives in the diaspora, such as the Banda de Gaitas Cidade de Bos Aires in Argentina, wear the Kilt Gallaecia on special occasions. |
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The other key publication is The Voice newspaper, which targets the Caribbean diaspora and has been printed for more than 20 years. |
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The Indian culinary scene in the Middle East has been influenced greatly by the large Indian diaspora in these countries. |
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Between 1898 and 1914, the peak years of Italian diaspora, approximately 750,000 Italians emigrated each year. |
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The diaspora concerned more than 25 million Italians and it is considered the biggest mass migration of contemporary times. |
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The country has had a broad cultural influence worldwide, also because numerous Italians emigrated to other places during the Italian diaspora. |
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Greek is spoken by about 13 million people, mainly in Greece, Albania and Cyprus, but also worldwide by the large Greek diaspora. |
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As a result, many Cimbri have left this mountainous region of Italy, effectively forming a worldwide diaspora. |
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A diaspora in high numbers took place after its unification in 1861 and continued through 1914 with the emergence of the First World War. |
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Danish diaspora consists of emigrants and their descendants, especially those that maintain some of the customs of their Danish culture. |
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Among the Chinese diaspora in Southeast Asia, Zheng He became a figure of folk veneration. |
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Morocco has a large diaspora, most of which is located in France, which has reportedly over one million Moroccans of up to the third generation. |
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Merchants also helped to establish diaspora within the communities they encountered, and over time their cultures became based on Buddhism. |
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A sizeable diaspora community exists across the world, slightly outnumbering inhabitants on the islands. |
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Fufu is the most common exported Ghanaian dish in that it is a delicacy across the African diaspora. |
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However, irreligious figures are growing and are higher in the diaspora, notably among Iranian Americans. |
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With the Puerto Rican diaspora of the 1940s, Puerto Rican literature was greatly influenced by a phenomenon known as the Nuyorican Movement. |
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The Inner Circle refers to English as it originally took shape and was spread across the world in the first diaspora. |
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The great number of Jamaicans living abroad has become known as the Jamaican diaspora. |
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The church currently has around 950,000 members in Kerala, and another 1,000,000 throughout the diaspora. |
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Congregations are also found throughout the Philippine diaspora in North America, Europe, Middle East and Asia. |
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The diaspora has seen Nicaraguans settling around in smaller communities in other parts of the world, particularly Western Europe. |
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Firstly, it is impossible to homogenize the contemporary Lebanese diaspora as a 'cultural' or 'political' community. |
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However while diasporic imagining might be homogenizing the diaspora has not been formed by a singular process, are not culturally very similar. |
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The African diaspora caused a melding of cultures, both African cultures and Western ones, in many places. |
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On a global scale, this disaster led to the creation of an Irish diaspora that numbers fifteen times the current population of the island. |
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The Bangladeshi diaspora dominates the South Asian restaurant industry in many Western countries, particularly in the United Kingdom. |
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There are also some speakers living outside Cornwall, particularly in the countries of the Cornish diaspora, as well as other Celtic nations. |
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In the Americas, the catalyst that brought about this change in meaning was the influence of the African diaspora and its people in other states. |
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The South Sudanese diaspora consists of citizens of South Sudan residing abroad. |
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Most South Sudanese value knowing one's tribal origin, its traditional culture and dialect even while in exile and diaspora. |
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The African diaspora which was created via slavery has been a complex interwoven part of American history and culture. |
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It is widely believed that the KLA received financial and material support from the Kosovo Albanian diaspora. |
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Some people speak Celtic languages in the other Celtic diaspora areas of the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. |
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Both novels configure the exilic condition at home and in the diaspora, revealing the unfeasibility of fixing an identity in a constant process of becoming. |
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The last four essays work interdisciplinarily, pairing performance studies with sound studies, disability studies, diaspora studies, and women's and gender studies. |
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There is also a large Pakistani diaspora worldwide, numbering over seven million, which has been recorded as the sixth largest diaspora in the world. |
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During the Viking Age, Scandinavian men and women travelled to many parts of Europe and beyond, in a cultural diaspora that left its traces from Newfoundland to Byzantium. |
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Emigration from Ireland in the 19th century contributed to the populations of England, the United States, Canada and Australia, where a large Irish diaspora lives. |
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This powerful first novel explores the history of Croatia and its diaspora from World War II to the present through the Moric family on a fictional island, Rosmarina. |
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Today, much of the Chinese diaspora traces their ancestry to this region. |
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It was also a sympathetic environment for his most famous poem, The Palinode, composed in praise of Helen, an important cult figure in the Doric diaspora. |
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For both the Irish in Ireland and those in the resulting diaspora, the famine entered folk memory and became a rallying point for various nationalist movements. |
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Braziel deciphers Dred as drag queen and drag king, exploring the stereotypes of black masculinities and how they can be reconfigured as femininity within the diaspora. |
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As of November 2013 A diaspora survey projected that by 2045, if nothing were done, only three people of working age would be left on the island, with the rest being very old. |
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Speculations include visits during the Austronesian diaspora around 700 AD, as some say the old Maldivian name for the islands originated from Malagasy. |
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Due to a high rate of emigration for work since the 1960s, Jamaica has a large diaspora around the world, particularly in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States. |
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Here is one of the great dishes of the Cuban diaspora,'' wrote Sam Sifton in his tribute to picadillo, which was first published in The New York Times Magazine. |
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The Irish language was carried abroad in the modern period by a vast diaspora, chiefly to Britain and North America, but also to Australia, New Zealand and Argentina. |
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For both the native Irish and those in the resulting diaspora, the famine entered folk memory and became a rallying point for Irish nationalist movements. |
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This surprise victory is attributed by many to the Romanian diaspora, of which almost 50 percent voted for Iohannis in the first tour, compared to 16 percent for Ponta. |
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They mostly inhabit Sweden and the other Nordic countries, in particular Finland, with a substantial diaspora in other countries, especially the United States. |
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In New England, the vast majority of French immigration in the 19th and early 20th centuries came not from France, but from over the border in Quebec, the Quebec diaspora. |
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I'll live in the diaspora and sell all kinds of shmattes, souvenirs from the secular Zion, remnants of the city that rose from sand and to sand returned. |
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Throughout the 20th century, millions of Greeks migrated to the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and Germany, creating a large Greek diaspora. |
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Examples of this include the renewing of Scottish Gaelic in Nova Scotia, and the Welsh diaspora of Argentina, In which 50,000 people in the 2010s claim Welsh heritage. |
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While the example provided in the study is about one fairly unique virtual community existing as diaspora, this book is not, in essence, about the Gathering of Uru. |
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The Sikh diaspora has been most successful in North America. |
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He placed an advertisement in The New York Times proclaiming the formation of Khalistan and was able to collect millions of dollars from the Sikh diaspora. |
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Participants come from Brittany, Ireland, Scotland, Cornwall, Wales, Cumbria, the Isle of Man, Cape Breton Island, Galicia, Asturias, Acadia, and the entire Celtic diaspora. |
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The government has created the Zimbabwe Human Capital Website to provide information for the diaspora on job and investment opportunities in Zimbabwe. |
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The second section looks at music as communication and community, with essays on topics such as the gamelan community in Dunedin and musical reassemblage in the jazz diaspora. |
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Even the Hebraists, Sharon suggests, could not let go of the diaspora. |
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The Outer Circle of English was produced by the second diaspora of English, which spread the language through imperial expansion by Great Britain in Asia and Africa. |
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Nationalism and the idea of an Indian and African diaspora and the cultural representations that they engender are hierarchized in the first world diaspora. |
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