Table of Contents
Introduction: ethnography of transnational migrants at home
1. The cultural production of ‘transnational locals’ in theory and (of) practice
2. Ethnicity and migration after communism
3. History and the politics of representation: Greek ethnicity in southern Russia
4. Making sense of home and homeland: motivations and strategies for a transnational migrant circuit
5. Transnationalisation, materialisation, and commoditisation of ethnicity
6. The transnational family: re-shaping kinship and genealogy
7. A place called ‘home’: property ownership, legitimacy and local identification of migrants in home communities
8. Becoming Pontic Greeks; The Pontic Greek cultural revival: a global network and local concerns
9. Conclusion: local lives of transnational migrants
Bibliography
Index