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Transnational childhoods : British Bangladeshis, identities and social change / Benjamin Zeitlyn.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: Houndmills, Basingstoke Hampshire ; New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan, (c)2015.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781137426444
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • DA125 .T736 2015
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
2. British Bangladeshis -- 3. Transnational Practices -- 4. Childhoods, Space and Place -- 5. British Bangladeshis in Education -- 6. Islamic Identities -- 7. Conclusions.
Subject: This book is about British Bangladeshi children living and growing up in contemporary London. Benjamin Zeitlyn examines the transnational lives of children who are connected to an array of international events, communities and forces. These engagements and the complex power relations that lie behind them are revealed through an examination of socialisation practices in British Bangladeshi families. In London, the children live in a global city, connected to every part of the world through history, trade, travel, migration and media. As British Bangladeshis, their migration patterns emerged from the connections formed during the British Empire. As British Muslims, their identities are informed by an official and unofficial Islamophobia, fuelled by the 'war on terror' and debates over the relationships between liberal Western states and Islam. British Bangladeshis have found themselves at the centre of these debates, and this book provides revealing insights into how these processes have shaped their childhoods and identities.
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This book is about British Bangladeshi children living and growing up in contemporary London. Benjamin Zeitlyn examines the transnational lives of children who are connected to an array of international events, communities and forces. These engagements and the complex power relations that lie behind them are revealed through an examination of socialisation practices in British Bangladeshi families. In London, the children live in a global city, connected to every part of the world through history, trade, travel, migration and media. As British Bangladeshis, their migration patterns emerged from the connections formed during the British Empire. As British Muslims, their identities are informed by an official and unofficial Islamophobia, fuelled by the 'war on terror' and debates over the relationships between liberal Western states and Islam. British Bangladeshis have found themselves at the centre of these debates, and this book provides revealing insights into how these processes have shaped their childhoods and identities.

1. Introduction: Transnational Childhoods in a Global City -- 2. British Bangladeshis -- 3. Transnational Practices -- 4. Childhoods, Space and Place -- 5. British Bangladeshis in Education -- 6. Islamic Identities -- 7. Conclusions.

Includes bibliographies and index.

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