Abstract
This article explores how the mahjar press of New York City engaged with the Syrian Revolt of 1925. Building upon Benedict Anderson’s well-known theories of imagined and long-distance nationalisms, as well as more recent debates on transnationalism, this article is part of a larger attempt to geographically decenter the study of the 1925 revolt in order to contribute to a better understanding of the ways in which nationalism and anti-colonialism were negotiated through a dialectical relationship between the homeland and the diaspora. It argues that divergent views of the revolt are better understood by framing its construction in the press in terms of: 1.) an expression of trans-border, and yet particular, loyalties, and 2.) a reflection of the diaspora’s ambiguous place in the new international order set up by the League of Nations.
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CITATION STYLE
Bailony, R. (2022). Transnationalism and the Syrian Migrant Community: The Case of the 1925 Syrian Revolt. Mashriq & Mahjar: Journal of Middle East & North African Migration Studies, 1(1), 9–33. https://doi.org/10.24847/11i2013.3
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