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The Diary Weblog and the Traveling Tales of Diasporic Tourists

Karlsson, Lena LU (2006) In Journal of Intercultural Studies 27(4). p.299-312
Abstract
As has been commonly recognised, the Internet enables a transcendence of physical and national boundaries and therefore constitutes an ideal place for forging diasporic connections. There is no denying that the Internet has the potential to greatly affect how diasporic identities and senses of belonging are formed; the question is how, and in what online context? This article investigates a cluster of Asian American diary bloggers connected to a web-ring whose aim is to foster diasporic connections. More specifically, this article performs a discourse analysis of the tales of travelling to the ancestral homeland circulating within this cluster. I argue that the ancestral homes produced in these blogs are above all shaped by the real and... (More)
As has been commonly recognised, the Internet enables a transcendence of physical and national boundaries and therefore constitutes an ideal place for forging diasporic connections. There is no denying that the Internet has the potential to greatly affect how diasporic identities and senses of belonging are formed; the question is how, and in what online context? This article investigates a cluster of Asian American diary bloggers connected to a web-ring whose aim is to foster diasporic connections. More specifically, this article performs a discourse analysis of the tales of travelling to the ancestral homeland circulating within this cluster. I argue that the ancestral homes produced in these blogs are above all shaped by the real and imagined audience of fellow Asian American diary bloggers and the geographical and discursive place from which the ancestral home is imagined, i.e. the US. The diasporic imagination here emerges as locally situated. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Ethnic Travel Writing, Diasporic Identity, Authenticity, Diary Weblog, Online Community Formation
in
Journal of Intercultural Studies
volume
27
issue
4
pages
299 - 312
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • scopus:33745822379
ISSN
0725-6868
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0ca2147f-806e-4cc4-b0d7-0ad5a1a2d39a (old id 1858949)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 12:07:49
date last changed
2022-03-28 20:39:59
@article{0ca2147f-806e-4cc4-b0d7-0ad5a1a2d39a,
  abstract     = {{As has been commonly recognised, the Internet enables a transcendence of physical and national boundaries and therefore constitutes an ideal place for forging diasporic connections. There is no denying that the Internet has the potential to greatly affect how diasporic identities and senses of belonging are formed; the question is how, and in what online context? This article investigates a cluster of Asian American diary bloggers connected to a web-ring whose aim is to foster diasporic connections. More specifically, this article performs a discourse analysis of the tales of travelling to the ancestral homeland circulating within this cluster. I argue that the ancestral homes produced in these blogs are above all shaped by the real and imagined audience of fellow Asian American diary bloggers and the geographical and discursive place from which the ancestral home is imagined, i.e. the US. The diasporic imagination here emerges as locally situated.}},
  author       = {{Karlsson, Lena}},
  issn         = {{0725-6868}},
  keywords     = {{Ethnic Travel Writing; Diasporic Identity; Authenticity; Diary Weblog; Online Community Formation}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{299--312}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  series       = {{Journal of Intercultural Studies}},
  title        = {{The Diary Weblog and the Traveling Tales of Diasporic Tourists}},
  volume       = {{27}},
  year         = {{2006}},
}