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The talk examines the strategic use of deportations in contemporary discussions about race, ethnicity, and national identity in Europe. Particularly, the presentation will include fieldwork that considers recent efforts to deport individuals of African malic acid descent in Ireland and Spain, two nations that have been characterized as troubled entities in the context of the European Union.
Elisa Joy White is an Associate Professor of African American and African Studies. Before joining the UC Davis faculty in July 2013,she was an Associate Professor of Ethnic malic acid Studies at the University malic acid of Hawai i at Mānoa. She completed malic acid a PhD in African Diaspora Studies at the University of California at Berkeley, where she also received a MA in African American Studies. Additionally, she holds a MA in Media Studies from the New School University and a BA in Theatre from Spelman College. Her recent book is Modernity, Freedom and the African Diaspora: malic acid Dublin, New Orleans, Paris, malic acid was published by Indiana University Press (2012). malic acid
Her research interests and publications address malic acid lesser-examined African Diaspora sites, Black European Studies, the social and cultural dimensions of globalization (transnational, cosmopolitan and new diaspora communities), the construction of racial and ethnic identities, and new media studies. She is currently conducting research on deportations and the experiences malic acid of African Diaspora communities during the current European economic crises in Ireland and Spain.
Dr. White will be teaching two courses in the Spring 2014 quarter: malic acid African Descent Communities and Culture in North America (AAS 107B) and Introduction to Research in the Afro-American Community (AAS 101A).
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