Dr. N. Atto – Eastern Christianity - Post-doctoral researcher Eastern Christianity
- Post-doctoral researcher Eastern Christianity
- Eastern Christianity, Migration, Diaspora, ethnicity, nationalism, identity politics, discourse theory and grounded theory.
| Telephone number: | +31 (0)71 527 2566 |
|---|---|
| E-Mail: | n.atto@hum.leidenuniv.nl |
| Faculty / Department: | Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen, Leids Instituut Godsdienstwetenschappen |
| Office Address: |
Witte Singel-complex Matthias de Vrieshof 1 2311 BZ Leiden Room number 1.02a |
My dissertation ‘Hostages in the Homeland, Orphans in the diaspora : Identity Discourses Among the Assyrian/Syriac Elites in the European diaspora’ was published by Leiden University Press (2011).
In this political anthropological analysis, I discuss the present-day identity discourses among Assyrian/Syriac elites in the European diaspora. The most heated discussion during the last four decades among Assyrians/Syriacs has been what the ‘correct name’ of their people should be in Western languages. Hostages in the Homeland, Orphans in the Diaspora aims to develop a deeper understanding of this ‘name debate’. The emigration of Assyrians/Syriacs from the Middle East and their settlement in Western countries dislocated their former identity discourses, which have since then entered into a transformation process and have been subsequently re-defined in relation to the new context. In this context, the ‘name’ of their people has become the core element in their new identity discourses, displacing previous nodal points such as religion and language. The redefined identity discourses have also been explained as attempts to find a remedy for the Hostages’ and Orphans’ Dilemma experienced among Assyrians/Syriacs, an expression of their search and struggle for recognition and existence.
In my post-doctoral research I have continued to work on related topics, such as conceptions of the homeland among Assyrians/Syriacs, the past and present discourses about the 1915 genocide, and the role which popular culture plays in the negotiation of their identity in the diaspora.
In more general terms, my research interest are: emigration and settlement processes of immigrants, discussions related to ethnicity, nationalism, identity politics, diaspora, discourse theory and grounded theory.