Sambasivan & Parikh | First Person Press
Diaspora-ish
Diaspora-ish
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Diaspora-ish: Notes on Identities, Unbelonging, & Solidarities
Words By: Gayatri Sethi | Cover & Book Design By: Annika Sarin
A collective learning resource that offers inquiries about diasporic identity and belonging aimed at practicing global solidarity
What does it mean to be in diaspora? How do our identities and aspirations for belonging unfold during times of collective upheaval?
In her lifelong search for solidarity, educator Gayatri Sethi draws upon her own complex diasporic journey to explore widely accepted ideas about identity and belonging. Spanning three continents and multiple phases of the author’s life, Diaspora-ish offers inquiries into many facets of identity—names, relationships, ethnicities, citizenships—and poignantly demonstrates how these are weaponized to exclude and other. Addressing prevalent misconceptions about immigration, Sethi pushes for a deeper understanding of migration and diaspora that centers decoloniality and anti-imperialism. Diaspora-ish is an urgent call to unlearn oppressions in order to work bravely toward collective liberation.
In an extension of her genre-bending nonfiction debut Unbelonging, Sethi juxtaposes personal observations with academic notes and inquiries to guide readers through paradigm shifts in learning. Diaspora-ish presents an anti-imperial, anti-racist, collective learning resource that centers historically marginalized and excluded global realities.
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“Sethi’s sharp gaze pierces America’s model minority myth and white-adjacent behaviors . . . tackles thorny issues of anti-Blackness, Islamophobia, and white allyship that are often swept under the carpet . . . This learning resource is best read and reflected on in small doses.”
A timely interrogation of individual identities paving the way for collective action.—Kirkus Reviews
“Sethi analyzes, through discussions of geography, history, and cultural practice, diasporic “ways” as epistemologies – modes of knowing and surviving shaped by displacement and resistance . . . The text’s greatest strength lies in its insistence that ambiguity and partial belonging are not deficits but critical resources . . . a valuable contribution to diaspora studies, ethnic studies, and feminist cultural theory.”—School Library Journal
“. . . useful, interactive guide to accompany and build on her first book, Unbelonging, which I also loved.”—Karla Strand, Ms. Magazine
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Themes:
Memoir, Conflict with Society, Change, Identity, Injustice, Justice, Africa, Asia, Authentic Author, Citizenship, Community, Cultural Studies, Geography, Immigration & Emigration, North America, Prejudice & Racism, Social Awareness

Book Details
Reading Level Recommendations
Grades: 9- Higher Ed
Ages: 14-Adult
Subject Categories
YAN058000 YOUNG ADULT NONFICTION / Activism & Social Justice
YAN030040 YOUNG ADULT NONFICTION / Language Arts / Journal Writing
YAN051180 YOUNG ADULT NONFICTION / Social Topics / Prejudice & Racism
YAN051090 YOUNG ADULT NONFICTION / Social Topics / Emigration, Immigration & Refugees
Formats
Hardcover: 9781949528046
Paperback: 9781949528053
eBook: 9781949528060
Publication Date:
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Notes & Inquiries: Identities
DownloadThematic, interactive modules to integrate key topics from the book into culturally responsive curriculum.
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Notes & Inquiries: Immigrations
DownloadThematic, interactive modules to integrate key topics from the book into culturally responsive curriculum.
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Notes & Inquiries: Solidarities
DownloadThematic, interactive modules to integrate key topics from the book into culturally responsive curriculum.
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Meet the Author
Gayatri Sethi (Phd) is a diasporic Punjabi polycultural educator and cultural worker. She writes, creates and teaches about identity, belonging and solidarity. As a learner of decolonization, liberation movements and abolition, she unequivocally supports the Palestinian liberation movement. Her caregiving and outreach efforts center solidarity making across borders and geographies. As an aspirational abolitionist aunty to many, she is committed to unlearning cultural norms to reimagine collective liberation.