Destination Detroit Discourses on the Refugee in a Post-Industrial City
Materialtyp:
ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: University of Michigan Press 2023Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (210 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780472056453
- 9780472076451
- 9780472221349
- Arab Americans
- Arab Detroit
- Dearborn
- Detroit
- Detroit Metropolitan area
- Hamtramck
- Islamophobia
- Islamophobic discourse
- Metro Detroit
- Muslim Americans
- Orientalist discourse
- Syrian refugee crisis
- Syrian refugees
- University of Michigan-Dearborn
- cosmopolitanism from below
- counter discourse
- discourse on refugees
- documentary on refugees
- far right discourse
- far right discourse on refugees
- fear of refugee
- hospitality toward refugee
- immigrant other
- immigrants
- mainstreaming of far right discourse
- messy cosmopolitanism
- museum exhibit on refugees
- news coverage of refugees
- political rhetoric on refugees
- refugee agencies
- refugee as figure
- refugee as template
- refugee crisis
- refugee other
- refugees
- revitalizing cities
- rhetoric on refugees
- vernacular cosmopolitanism
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
Deindustrialized cities in the United States are at a particular crossroads when it comes to the contest over refugees. Do refugees represent opportunity or danger? These cities are in desperate need to stem population and resource loss, problems that an influx of refugees could seemingly help address. However, the cities are simultaneously dealing with local communities that are already feeling internally displaced by economic and technological flux. For these existing citizens, the prospect of incoming refugee populations can be perceived as a threat to financial, cultural, and personal security. Few U.S. locations provide a more vivid case study of this fight than Metro Detroit, where competing interest groups are waging war over the meaning of the figure of the refugee. This book dives deeply into the discourse on refugees occurring among various institutions in Metro Detroit. The way in which local institutions talk about refugees gives us vital clues as to how they are negotiating competing pressures and how the city overall is negotiating competing imperatives. Indeed, this local discourse gives us a crucial glimpse into how U.S. cities are defining and redefining themselves today. The figure of the refugee becomes a slate on which groups with varied interests write their stories, aspirations, and fears. Consequently, we can figure out from local refugee discourses the ongoing question of what it means to be a Metro Detroiter—and by extension, what it means to be a revitalizing U.S. city in this age.
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eng
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