Results 71 to 80 of about 161 (99)
Crimean Tatar Community in the United States (1960–): From Émigré to Diaspora Nationalism
This chapter examines the movements of Crimean Tatar refugees of the Second World War, who settled in the United States, usually after a short stay in Turkey. The first mini-case features the period between 1960 and 1990, in which the refugee movement was divided into political and apolitical branches.
Filiz Tutku Aydın
exaly +3 more sources
© Journal of Language and Literature. This article studies Chinese loanwords in the speech of Tatars living in a multilingual environment on the territory of modern China. The linguistic features of sinologisms (Chinese borrowings) which generate a particular stratum of the vocabulary of the Tatar diaspora are identified and the characteristics of its ...
Guzel Amirovna Nabiullina +1 more
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Crimean Tatar Community in Turkey (1908–): From Émigré to Diaspora Nationalism
This chapter will examine the long-distance nationalism that emerged among the Crimean Tatar diaspora in Turkey at the beginning of the twentieth century. Even the declaration of the first Crimean Tatar Republic was largely prepared in Turkey, utilizing resources of the host land.
Filiz Tutku Aydın
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Crimean Tatar Community in Romania (1900–): From Exile to Diaspora Nationalism
In this chapter, the nationalist movements among the Crimean Tatars, who have immigrated Ottoman Dobruca region throughout the nineteenth century, will be examined. The long-distance nationalism in Dobruca between 1900 and 1945 forms the first mini-case.
Filiz Tutku Aydın
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The Great Retreat. The Formation of the Crimean Tatar Diaspora in Turkey
Brian Glyn Williams
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Émigré, Exile, Diaspora, and Transnational Movements of the Crimean Tatars
Filiz Tutku Aydın
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Diaspora of Diaspora: Turkey-Finnish Tatars Relations
Evren Küçük, Murat Yilmaz
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The Tatar Diaspora in North America: Experience of Integration
Gulnara Atnasheva
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A diaspora is a migrant community which crosses borders, retains an ethnic group consciousness and peculiar institutions over extended periods (Cohen, 1997, p. ix). It is an ancient social formation, comprised of people living out of their ancestral homeland, who retain their loyalties toward their co-ethnics and the homeland from which they were ...
Chong Jin Oh
openalex +2 more sources
The Crimean Tatars: the diaspora experience and the forging of a nation
openalex +2 more sources

