Turks in the New Germany

The Turkish community in Germany is fractured along ethnic, class, religious, and generational lines, although the practice of reciprocity provides stability and continuity in ethnic identification. Turks are also categorized by German discourses, which shifted after reunification, incorporating Tur...

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Veröffentlicht in:American anthropologist 1997-12, Vol.99 (4), p.754-769
1. Verfasser: White, Jenny B.
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container_title American anthropologist
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creator White, Jenny B.
description The Turkish community in Germany is fractured along ethnic, class, religious, and generational lines, although the practice of reciprocity provides stability and continuity in ethnic identification. Turks are also categorized by German discourses, which shifted after reunification, incorporating Turks into an anxiety-laden east-west problematic. Turkish responses to anti-foreigner violence reflect ethnicity both as category and as practice: withdrawal behind communal boundaries or creation of a transnational creole ethnic self around the practice of reciprocity.
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Anthropology
Children
Classroom communication
Communities
Community identity
Cultural identity
Culture
Ethnic groups
Ethnic Identity
Ethnic minorities
Ethnicity
Ethnology
Europa
Federal Republic of Germany
Gender identity
German language
German Reunification
Germany
Middle Eastern Cultural Groups
Minority & ethnic groups
Parents
Political identity
Race relations
Racial conflict
Racism
Reciprocity
Social interaction
Social relations. Intercultural and interethnic relations. Collective identity
Social structure and social relations
Turkish language
Turkish literature
Turks
Xenophobia
title Turks in the New Germany
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