Nation and Immigration


 
Portal Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies Vol. 2, No. 2 July 2005 
ISSN: 1449-2490 
http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/portal/splash/ 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
Nation and Immigration 
 
Ali Behdad, University of California, Los Angeles 
 
A close friend of mine, who happens to be a neuroscientist—well acquainted with all the 

vicissitudes of our brains—recently told me: ‘You know, I always thought you had a 

highly theoretical and abstract mind, but I now realize that you are really a meat and 

potato kind of guy!’ Though I was initially hurt by his rather blunt and unsolicited 

observation, as I thought about it more I began to realize that there was perhaps some 

truth to what he was saying and that being a ‘meat and potato guy’ is not so bad after all! 

I begin by recounting this conversation both to apologize if what I have to say in this 

article sounds a bit too commonsensical, and to contextualize my seemingly anachronistic 

return to such ‘old-fashioned’ concepts as nation and immigration in what appears to be a 

globalized world populated by ‘nomadic subjects’. 

 

Even a cursory glance at the recent works of cultural critics and postcolonial theorists 

will suffice to confirm that keywords such as nation and immigration are no longer in 

vogue today, as new concepts such as postnation and diaspora have displaced them in our 

current intellectual parlance. Encouraged by seemingly radical changes heralded by 

economic globalization, transnational migration across the globe, and the spread of 

electronic culture, most cultural and postcolonial theorists have suggested that 

overmastering and monologic notions of identity and culture associated with a particular 

nation or ethnicity impair intellectual freedom, suppress creative interaction between 

members of various communities, and ultimately fail to describe the nuanced and 

complicated hybrid formations that characterize our global relations today. These critics 

therefore view the nation form as an obsolete model of community, cultivated only by 



Behdad  Nation and Immigration 

ethnic fundamentalists and oppressive regimes, while considering nationalism a dark, 

antiquated, and repressive discourse producing only ethnic conflicts and monolithic forms 

of identification. Roger Rouse, to cite a seminal example of this position, remarks:  
 

We live in a confusing world, a world of crisscrossed economies, intersecting systems of meaning 
and fragmented identities. Suddenly, the comforting modern imagery of nation-states and national 
languages, of coherent communities and consistent subjectivities, of dominant centers and distant 
margins no longer seems adequate (Rouse 1991, 8). 

 
Most cultural critics, like Rouse, have theorized often in a celebratory fashion, tropes of 

mobility such as exile, travel, displacement, nomadism, and diaspora as keywords to 

account for contemporary forms of cultural identity. In several of his works, Edward 

Said, for example, while attentive to the psychological losses and political 

disenfranchisement that dislocation entails, quoted the words of a thirteenth-century 

monk, Hugo of Saint Victor, to argue that total exile and absolute refusal to belong is the 

most complete form of identity and intellectual subjectivity (Said 1984). Distance and 

alienation, as horrendous as they are to experience, according to him, nonetheless enable 

critical insight and originality of vision, forcing us to abandon fixed notions of identity as 

well as eschewing ideologies of mastery and nationalistic attachments. Similarly, Stuart 

Hall has constantly valorized diaspora identities, describing them as capable of 

‘constantly producing and reproducing themselves anew, through transformation and 

difference’ (Hall 1990, 235). Like Said, Hall views the decision to live in self-exile, 

without the security of one’s culture, as a redemptive movement, one that mediates a 

dialogic awareness, thus enabling the creative process of writing and critical thinking. 

And finally, Homi Bhabha has further claimed that postcolonial people, as 

deterritorialized subjects, ‘displace some of the great metropolitan narratives of progress 

and law and order, and question the authority and authenticity of those narratives’ 

(Bhabha 1990b, 218). According to Bhabha, diasporas, as exemplary communities of the 

global world, are necessarily politicized and oppositional, always working collectively 

against oppressive power relations and cultural hegemony while displacing nationalist 

forms of identification with their nomadic subjectivities.  

 

I have titled my paper ‘nation and immigration’ by way of intimating my intellectual 

alignment with an alternative theoretical position that is critical of celebratory theories of 
 
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postcoloniality. I have in mind here scholars such as Kitty Calavita (Inside the State: The 

Bracero Program, Immigration, and the INS, 1992), Maxim Silverman (Deconstructing 

the Nation: Immigration, Racism and Citizenship in Modern France, 1992), William 

Barbieri (Ethics of Citizenship: Immigration and Group Rights in Germany, 1998), and 

Paul Gilroy (‘There Ain’t No Black  in the Union Jack’: The Cultural Politics of Race 

and Nation, 1987). In the works of these critics, situated terms (like immigration, 

citizenship, race, and racism) displace abstract notions (like diaspora, deterritorialization, 

exile, and hybridity). In what follows, therefore, I wish to offer a critical assessment of 

the cultural and political implications of postcolonial and cultural critics’ abandonment of 

situated terms like immigration, citizenship, race, state, and their celebratory embracing 

of such unmoored notions as nomadism, deterritorialization, exile, hybridity, and 

postnation. On the one hand, I hope to demonstrate that postcolonial critics’ valorization 

of displacement’s redemptive power mystifies the oppositional possibilities of hybrid 

consciousness. On the other, I wish to argue that such theoretical projects fail to both 

historicize the particularities of postcolonial cultural formations and the importance of the 

politics of location in describing various manifestations of the global.  

 

In his seminal essay, ‘Patriotism and Its Futures’, Appadurai posits the concepts of 

‘postnation’ and ‘postnational’ to describe the cultural and political conditions of global 

formations today (Appadurai 1993). He uses these terms to elaborate three related 

implications of globalization as a general phenomenon, transforming cultural, economic, 

and political relations everywhere in the world. First, he employs these terms to mean 

‘the [historical] process of moving to a global order in which the nation-state has become 

obsolete and other formations for allegiance and identity have taken its place’. Second, he 

has in mind the ‘alternative forms for the organization of global traffic in resources, 

images, and ideas—forms that either contest the nation-state actively or constitute 

peaceful alternatives for large-scale political loyalties’. And third, the notion of 

postnation implies what may be labeled diasporic nationalism, which, encouraged by ‘the 

steady erosion of the capabilities of the nation-state to monopolize loyalty,’ are ‘largely 

divorced from territorial states’ (169). The example that Appadurai cites to drive these 

points home is, interestingly, the United States, an enormously wealthy superpower that 

 
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Behdad  Nation and Immigration 

has been able to organize itself around ‘a modern political ideology in which pluralism is 

central to the conduct of democratic life’—a nation where various immigrant 

communities have been able to manufacture what he calls ‘delocalized transnations’ that 

retain special ideological links to a putative place of origin but are otherwise thoroughly 

diasporic collectivities (173). Insightful though Appadurai’s argument is in locating the 

cultural implications of globalization, his salutary claims about the disappearance of 

nation-state and the emergence of diaspora communities appear problematic, especially 

since 9/11, a tragic event that not only ushered a powerful form of patriotism in the 

United States, but also helped fortify the power of state apparatuses such as FBI, CIA, 

and the INS, linked and centrally organized now under the rubric of the new Department 

of Homeland Security. I have discussed the impact of 9/11 elsewhere (Behdad 

forthcoming), but let me restate here parenthetically a crucial point about the specific 

context of the United States before I proceed with my discussion of Appadurai’s 

argument. What is remarkable about the hurried passage of the USA Patriotic Act that 

essentially curtailed certain constitutional rights of citizens after 9/11 was the powerful 

way in which the figure of the immigrant/foreigner once again provided the differential 

other through whose threatening presence in the nation a state of emergency was 

declared, enabling thus the entrenchment of disciplinary apparatuses and surveillance 

procedures as necessary security measures to protect the democratic polity from the 

other’s terror—apparatuses and surveillance procedures that had already been tested and 

used at the U.S.-Mexico border long before the tragic events of 9/11 gave the government 

the perfect rationale to extent them to every port of entry. Not only was a substantial part 

of the Patriot Act devoted to the enhancement of regulatory immigration procedures that 

denied foreigners, immigrants, and permanent residents habeas corpus and due judicial 

review and permitted indefinite detention of those in violation of any immigration status, 

including such a minor offense as overstaying a visa, but the bill also implicitly depicted 

the brown-skinned immigrant—Middle Eastern, Southeast Asian, and Latino, among 

others—as a threat to the democratic nation in an apocalyptic fashion that called for an 

Armageddon on the part of the state to eradicate the (terrorist) foreigner or immigrant. 

But, as I suggested above, even before such legislative changes, it was already evident 

that, although with the emergence of global politics and the spread of free-trade zones, 

 
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Behdad  Nation and Immigration 

the borders of nation-states had become increasingly porous, national governments 

continued to exercise a great deal of power in planning and shaping the ways in which 

their countries are globalized. Indeed, international organizations depend on individual 

state agencies to regulate trade and security, markets and systems of communication. 

 

Now, to return to Appadurai’s argument in the context of my critique of postcolonial 

theories of postnation and hybridity, I think it is important to note that Appadurai’s 

argument about the disappearance of the nation-state and the emergence of diaspora 

consciousness holds a mimetic relation with anti-colonial discourse on nation and 

nationalism. As one reads Appadurai’s compelling argument about the disappearing of 

nation-state, the specter of Fanon appears above and beneath every sentence—Fanon who 

first described the predicaments of national consciousness in the colony in his seminal 

book, The Wretched of the Earth (1963). Describing nationalism as an ‘empty shell’, 

Fanon cogently observed that ‘the battle against colonialism [and oppression] does not 

run straight away along the lines of nationalism’ (148). As a cosmopolitan intellectual, he 

considered internationalism as the goal of anti-colonial movement, arguing that at the 

heart of liberation movement an ‘international consciousness lives and grows’ (248). And 

yet, in the following chapter on national culture, Fanon claimed that ‘every culture is first 

and foremost national’, and that the demand for nationhood, the desire for national 

culture, and the process of decolonization are intertwined (216). The task of the colonial 

intellectual, then, was to help produce an ‘authentic national consciousness, freed from 

the psychological and ideological forces of colonialism’—a consciousness that involved a 

movement away from what he labeled ‘Western culture’ toward a popular and democratic 

form of nationhood that empowered every social strata. 

 

What we encounter in the discourses of postnationalism and diaspora today is a similar 

ideological ambivalence toward what constitutes national consciousness and belonging. 

Whether we read Said, Bhabha or Appadurai, we notice the paired critique of nationalism 

and celebration of a more cosmopolitan, imagined community—for Said, it is the calling 

for a Palestinian nation that haunts his celebration of exile as a metaphor of ideal 

subjectivity; for Bhabha, it is the ‘scattering of the people that in other times and other 

 
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places, in the nations of others, becomes a time of gathering’ (Bhabha 1990a, 291); and 

for Appadurai it is the delocalized transnation that is celebrated against the white nation. 

What are we to make of these contradictory articulations of the nation form?  How are we 

to go beyond the problematic binary of good nationalism vs. bad nationalism implied in 

this critical debate?  

 

A starting point to address these questions is to unpack the relation between state and 

nation and explore their roles in the global flow of people, capital, and commodities that 

characterize our contemporary world. What is striking about critiques of nation and 

nationalism by cultural and postcolonial theorists is the absence of any substantial 

discussion of the state, especially problematic because the nation and state are often 

linked—that is, in the nation-state—if not fully equated. Often reduced to a repressive 

apparatus, the notion of state is considered passé in today’s Western academy, associated 

with an outdated Marxist paradigm that limited its function to maintaining class 

domination. But I want to suggest a return to this key term and question the extent to 

which the rhetoric of globalization has obscured the important role states and 

governments play in transnational relations of power. Indeed, state apparatuses continue 

to retain, if not exclusive, tremendous power over deployment of force as well as the 

authority to regulate how transnational corporations invest their resources and engage in 

business transactions. We should ask, therefore, what functions do states, as agencies of 

representation, perform in the broader system of international regulation? Do global 

agencies and transnational corporations really undermine the sovereignty of national 

governments? Have states become the local agents of corporate interests? Or, does the 

fact of their being ultimately answerable to their citizens make them the local shields 

against global capitalism? Can states re-create a sense of national identity in response to 

the political and economic constraints of globalization? Or, do state apparatuses mobilize 

the idea of the nation to enable economic interests of transnational corporations? I raise 

these questions both to underscore the problematic tendency among postcolonial and 

cultural critics to overlook the function of states and their apparatuses in how global 

networks and transnational relations are formed and to offer new areas of inquiry in 

unpacking and understanding the impact of global interconnectedness.  

 
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But the overlooking of the roles of nation and state in recent theories of diaspora and 

postnationalism seems also problematic given the speed with which new nations and 

nationalism are actually emerging today, the peculiar propensity for and the intensity of 

border fortification in spite of the global flow of people and commodities across them, 

and the forging of new partnerships between certain states and the global capital market. I 

want to suggest that while national borders may no longer impede most of the 

international trade and other global economic transactions, they do nonetheless matter 

greatly when it comes to human subjects whose movements are carefully regulated. I 

have shown elsewhere that in the past twenty years the principle of governmentality in 

the United States has actually been solidified, as demonstrated, for example, by the 

expansion of the prison industry and the proliferation of the technologies of border 

control at the US-Mexico border (Behdad 1998). Similarly, the integration of Europe in 

the form of a union has also meant tougher restrictions on the movement of people from 

the Middle East, Africa, and most of Asia to Europe. 

   

Moreover, in spite of the increase in global cultural contacts, nationalist sentiments 

persist throughout the world and states continue to exert a great deal of power as to how a 

national community is globalized. On the one hand, as R. Radhakrishnan points out: 
 

neither the deracinating multi- or inter-national spread of capitalism nor the Marxist theoretical 
assimilation of the national question within an internationalist communism has been able to do 
away with the urgencies of the imagined communities of nationalism (Radhakrishnan 1992, 83).  

 
Nationalism and state apparatuses remain powerful everywhere, in Iran and the United 

States, in Serbia as well as France. And, without romanticizing the role of states and 

nationalism, one may add that in an era of foot-loose capitalism, certain nationalist 

sentiments or state forms of sovereignty may in fact prove useful in countering the lack of 

accountability on the part of giant transnational corporations. On the other hand, even the 

social scientists who argue that ‘the contemporary globalization of politics is 

transforming the very foundations of world order by reconstituting traditional forms of 

sovereign statehood and reordering international political relations’ have to acknowledge 

that the concept of state ‘sovereignty has by no means been rendered redundant’ and that 

 
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‘political community continue to be shaped by the territorial reach of state sovereignty’ 

(Held et al 1999, 85-86). In other words, neither the internationalization of politics, nor 

the globalization of capital implies the disappearance of national form or state 

government. Quite the contrary, globalization has actually reinforced their role as 

arbitrators in international processes. There remain indeed many questions to be 

answered yet about the problem of the nation-state and its ideological apparatuses.  How, 

for example, is the nation-state re-imagined in our globalized world?  What roles do 

states play in the particular ways in which globalization is embraced and practiced in 

different locations? How are we to account for the rise of nationalist, religious, and ethnic 

fervor in a world that has become increasingly more transnational? What are the ways in 

which the formal universality of nationalism as a socio-political concept can be 

understood in the context of the irremediable particularity of nationalism’s concrete 

manifestations?  And finally, how can we simultaneously critique the regressive 

tendencies of nationalism in Bosnia and Rwanda while advocating, say, a Palestinian or 

Kurdish nation?  

 

Saskia Sassen in her illuminating essay ‘Spatialities and Temporalities of the Global: 

Elements for a Theorization’ cogently suggests that globalization ‘persists as a partial 

condition’ by which she means that there is significant overlap and interaction between 

the global and the national (Sassen 2000, 215). She writes, ‘Each sphere, global and 

national, describes a spatio-temporal order with considerable internal differentiation and 

growing mutual imbrications with the other’ (216). One direction, she seems to suggest, 

is not to forget the nation in our postnational consciousness, but to study instead the 

‘dynamics of interaction between the global and the national’, a dynamic that sheds light 

on the ‘incipient and partial denationalization of domains once understood and/or 

constructed as national’ (216). What the more nuanced discussions of globalization such 

as Sassen’s make evident is that the uneven flow between nationalism and globalization 

is fundamentally context-dependent, and that while transnational circuits are appearing 

throughout the world, their formations are always socio-historically contingent and 

culturally specific. Indeed, the strategic nature of economic globalization, as Sassen 

cogently argues, suggests that ‘most global processes materialize in national territories 

 
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and do so to a considerable extent through national institutional arrangements, from 

legislative actions to corporate agenda’ (228). 

 

The second issue I wish to raise with regard to Appadurai’s exemplary description of the 

global is the question of diaspora and its liberating potentials. Diaspora is at once the 

cause and effect of postnational consciousness and as such it occupies a central role in the 

way new identities are imagined in the global village, according to him. Appadurai, like 

most postcolonial critics, views the presence of diasporic communities in the United 

States in salutary terms, considering them essential in fashioning a new ‘postnational 

politics’ that would ultimately resolve ‘the tension between the centripetal pull of 

Americanness and the centrifugal push of diasporic diversity in American life’ 

(Appadurai 1993, 173). The emergence of delocalized transnations, he argues, is forcing 

American society to ‘confront the needs of pluralism and of immigration, to construct a 

society around diasporic diversity’ (173). I take issue with Appadurai’s claim for several 

reasons. To begin, as a specific claim about the new global order, it overlooks the fact 

that the United States has always constructed its national identity around diversity and 

immigration. Indeed, beginning with J. Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur’s invocation of 

America as ‘every person’s country’ in 1782, through the celebration of the country as a 

‘nation of many nations’ in the poetry of Walt Whitman in the nineteenth century, to John 

F. Kennedy’s portrayal of the United States as a ‘nation of immigrants’ in the twentieth 

century, the official archive of the nation is replete with examples of this founding myth 

that defines immigration as the cornerstone of national identity. But what Appadurai fails 

to further observe is that such a construction of identity is a forgetful articulation that 

suppresses historical knowledge about the economics of immigration, while producing a 

pseudo-historical consciousness about what it means to be an American. I have 

elaborated elsewhere (Behdad, 2005) the productive function of the myth of immigrant 

America, but it is worth pointing out in passing that the benign myth of immigrant 

America is frequently called upon to shore up a sense of national pride and to enable 

cultural renewal. Such a project of national identification remains potent because it 

disavows the ways in which the formation of American polity was achieved through the 

violent conquest of Native Americans, the brutal exploitation of enslaved Africans, and 

 
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the colonialist annexations of French and Mexican territories, not to mention the fact that 

the narrative of immigrant America helps us turn a blind to the nation’s long history of 

xenophobia and to the disciplining and criminalizing of aliens today.  

 

Moreover, on an empirical level, it is not evident that geographical displacement 

necessarily leads in most cases to any originality of political vision, to the breaking of 

intellectual and cultural barriers, and to solidarity in opposing hegemonic power of the 

majority, as most postcolonial and cultural theorists tend to suggest.  For, even the most 

superficial acquaintance with the ethnic politics of a city like Los Angeles reveals how 

stratified and conflicted Third World-origin and minority communities are in this city. 

Not only are there fundamental cultural and economic differences among various 

diaspora communities, but also these differences have often sowed mutual hostilities 

across immigrant and minority communities, as the Los Angeles riots in 1992 painfully 

demonstrated.  The ‘postnational’ communities in Los Angeles are often more 

chauvinistic and nostalgic towards their countries of origins than the citizens of those 

nations, a fact that is sociologically evident in the rise of ethnic enclaves throughout the 

city and their nostalgic re-invention of certain arcane traditions. In many cases, the sense 

of loss and disenfranchisement among many immigrant communities has led to a new 

form of tribalism characterized by antagonism and racial superiority toward other 

minorities. As James Clifford points out, ‘Indeed, some of the most violent articulations 

of purity and racial exclusivism come from diaspora populations’ (Clifford 1997, 251). In 

short, it is not clear that ‘delocalized transnations’ are free from the chauvinism of 

nationalism or the forces of state apparatuses, as Appadurai seems to suggest, nor is it 

evident that they necessarily constitute oppositional alternatives to the hegemonic power 

of the majority by displacing ‘the great metropolitan narratives of progress, law, and 

order’, as Bhabha claims (Appadurai 1996, 169; Bhabha 1990b, 218). 

 

In addition, it is important to note that, as Edouard Glissant has cogently argued, ‘The 

permutations of cultural contact change more quickly than any one theory could account 

for. No theory of cultural contact is [thus] conducive to generalization’ (Glissant 1989, 

19). Hence the importance of the local and the impossibility of a generalizing notion of 

 
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postcolonial or postnational subjectivity, for transnational forms are always interpolated 

by the politics of location, and as such their manifestations can be quite varied, and 

always over-determined. There are, for example, obvious differences between the 

experiences of various immigrant communities in the United States—for instance, while 

some communities, such as Armenians in Glendale, California, have been able to 

maintain a sense of collectivity and cultural particularity across their national 

backgrounds, Caribbean immigrants in New York City have fashioned a creolized 

identity with blacks and Latinos, an identity that is less ethnically rigid and more 

culturally fluid. In addition, there are also radical permutations even within a single 

immigrant community, permutations that, again, are over-determined by class, gender, 

religion, and language. Such differences within and across immigrant communities 

demand an understanding of interculturality that is attentive to the specificity of their 

historical formations and geographical locations. 

 

My aim in raising the issue of diasporic exclusivism and its local interpolation is not to 

pose a binary relation between the symbolic and the real. Nor is it my aim to claim 

nationalist sentiment as an antidote to global disempowerment. Rather, my hope is to 

draw attention to the discrepancy between celebratory explorations of diasporic 

consciousness by academics, writers, and artists and the complex and over-determined 

itineraries of many immigrants caught in the tailspin of a globalization that has made 

them immigrate to the West in hopes of upward economic mobility and political freedom. 

This discrepancy is symptomatic of the difference between what the political theorist 

John Armstrong calls ‘mobilized and proletarian diasporas’ (Armstrong 1976). 

Armstrong acknowledges the vagueness of the term ‘diaspora’ to describe ‘any ethnic 

collectivity which lacks a territorial base within a given polity’. But he attempts to make 

this term more useful by introducing what I consider to be a very helpful, albeit 

insufficient, distinction between the proletarian class of diasporas who are ‘a 

disadvantaged product of modernized polities’ (for example, Mexican farm and service 

workers in Southern California) and the mobilized class, defined as ‘an ethnic group 

which does not have a general status advantage, yet which enjoys many material and 

cultural advantages compared to other groups in the multiethnic polity’ (for example, 

 
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Iranians in Southern California or Indians in Northern California) (393). Armstrong raises 

not only the issue of social class or even symbolic capital here, but he also discusses a 

broad range of other factors such as religion, language, labor, cultural myth, networks of 

family and personal relationships to schematize the critical differences that exist between 

various communities of immigrants. Obviously, no diasporic community fits neatly into 

these categories, because immigrants occupy a plurality of social and economic positions, 

but this sort of distinction is critically necessary, because it calls into question the 

unmoored metaphors of border-crossing, nomadism, and hybridity so prevalent among 

postcolonial intellectuals and cultural critics. The kind of distinction Armstrong 

introduces is useful in helping us differentiate various trajectories of displacement and 

become attentive to the historical taintedness of tropes of mobility that are so fashionable 

in intellectual circles today. 

 

Moreover, Armstrong’s distinction between mobilized and proletariat diasporas is helpful 

in understanding why émigré writers and intellectuals from the ex-European colonies as 

privileged diasporas—privileged by virtue of access to discourse and representation—

view displacement in celebratory terms while representing the everyday struggles of 

ordinary immigrants in Western metropolises in their aesthetic and critical discourses, 

representations that, as Gayatri Spivak has cogently shown, are often marked by a double 

contradiction: a misrepresentation of alternative histories of colonialism and a 

misconception of the neo-colonial condition (Spivak 1989). 

  

To ignore the crucial economic and cultural differences among immigrant communities 

by generalizing and labeling them all ‘postnational others’ marginalized by the white 

nation-state or Western narrative of progress, as Appadurai and Bhabha do in their works, 

is not only intellectually problematic, but also politically dangerous. I say intellectually 

problematic because such claims tend to assume a binary relationship between center and 

periphery, power and opposition, hegemony and resistance, and nationalism and exile in 

describing the predicament of geographical displacement, and as such fail to address the 

complex and over-determined configurations of transnational relations of power that 

force or enable migration. And I say such claims are politically dangerous because they 

 
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risk inflating the privileged itineraries of certain postcolonial intellectuals and expatriate 

professionals with those of disenfranchised immigrants and displaced refugees, a 

conflation that participates in the mobilization of the myth of immigrant America to shore 

up patriotism and enable cultural renewal. 

 

Mahatma Gandhi was once asked what he thought of Western civilization and he 

responded: ‘It would be a good idea!’ Gandhi’s insightfully sarcastic response captures 

this paper’s position with regard to tropes of mobility and discourses of transnationalism. 

The popular rhetoric of postnationalism and diaspora suggest that the world is becoming 

a better place to live through an intensification of economic interdependence, 

technological interconnectedness, and cultural hybridization. The demise of state power, 

according to the boosters of globalization, has led to a positive diffusion of authority, 

while technological advances have enabled a more mobile and pluralistic sense of 

cultural and political identity. These would obviously be salutary developments were it 

not for the fact that they are available only to a tiny and privileged minority. As Pico Iyer 

insightfully observes:  
 

one of the most troubling features of the globalization we celebrate is that the so-called linking of 
the planet has, in fact, intensified the distance between people: the richest 358 people in the world, 
by UN calculations, have a financial worth as great as that of 2.3 billion others, and even in the 
United States, the prosperous home of egalitarianism, the most wired man in the land (Bill Gates) 
has a net worth larger than that of 40 percent of the country’s households, or perhaps 100 million 
of his compatriots combined (Iyer 2000, 25-26).  

 
If I espouse the skeptical position in these postcolonial debates it is not to undermine the 

advantages of cultural, economic and political interconnectedness, but to draw attention 

to how the boosters of transnationalism and diaspora have failed to address the contingent 

and uneven nature of global flow. What seem urgent now are not more paeans to the 

global ideal, but a willingness to confront the challenges that stand in the way of its 

realization.  Counter-intuitively perhaps, a global future demands a present engagement 

with the enduring issue of unequal and uneven development. 

 

To conclude, what I have been obliquely attempting here has been to suggest that a 

critical form of postcolonial discourse can offer a historical corrective to the celebratory 

theories of diaspora and postnationalism. I think cultural theories of transnationalism and 
 
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globalization have been blinkered by the misty notion of ‘time/space compression’, 

coined by David Harvey as a postmodern phenomenon to describe the ways in which new 

technologies of communication have shrunk geographical and temporal distance, 

enabling a condition of instantaneity in human interactions as well as the possibility of 

transculturation and hybridity (Harvey 1989). The speed and widening of global 

interconnectedness seem to have rendered history and geography obsolete, as the 

transnational flows of people and commodities, ideas and images, capital and information 

are claimed to dismantle such temporal and spatial barriers as nation and state. This 

popular view of our contemporary condition not only dissimulates the spatial segregation 

that characterizes the current form of globalization but it also overlooks the (neo-) 

colonial dimensions of its complex genealogy. A historically informed engagement with 

the unequal geography of transnationalism can constitute a critical step in a new direction 

for postcolonial theorists. In other words, instead of ‘going beyond’ what postcolonialism 

has already theorized about European forms of imperialism by jumping on the band-

wagon of globalization discourse, we may deploy the historical and political knowledge 

that (post)colonial works have already produced to explore the unequal geography of 

globalization and its historical links with European colonialism and the process of de-

colonization.  

 

Economists have singled out two historical periods, 1870-1939 and 1950-1973, as central 

to the rise of global order: while in the first period ‘markets for key goods began to 

acquire a global dimension’, during the second period, labeled the ‘golden age’, ‘trade 

volumes grew at 5.8 per cent per annum, … [and] world output grew at an unprecedented 

rate of 3.9 per cent per annum’ (Held et al 1999, 163-164). What has been overlooked by 

economists, however, is the role of European colonialism and de-colonization in the rise 

of global order, neither acknowledging nor exploring the fact that these periods coincided 

with the height of European colonialism and its dismantling, respectively. Postcolonial 

discourse, I think, is well positioned to map the colonial contexts of global flows to 

discern the unequal geography of our global condition. In particular, postcolonial 

historiography can provide a critical genealogy to explicate the political shift from 

European colonialism to American imperialism. What are the conditions, we may ask for 

 
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Behdad  Nation and Immigration 

example, that enabled the global spread of imperialism after the spectacular phenomenon 

of de-colonization? What cultural attitudes, political practices, and economic strategies 

from the colonial period continue to persist today? Why have ex-colonized nations failed 

to reap the benefits of global trade? There are certainly no easy answers to these 

questions, but to grapple with the issues they raise may provide a springboard, if not a 

framework, towards a postcolonial genealogy of globalization.  

 

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Iyer, P. 2000, The Global Soul: Jet Lag, Shopping Malls, and the Search for Home, 
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	Nation and Immigration
	Ali Behdad, University of California, Los Angeles