British-born Tamils : a study of young Tamil Londoners

The present study concentrates on the lifestyles and experie~ces of British-born young Tamils, and explores various components of their identities. Not many sociological studies have been condu~ted on the Tamil community in Britain. The study approaches its subject area through combining detailed et...

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Main Author: Antony, Richard
Published: University of Surrey 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.560501
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5605012015-03-20T05:30:19ZBritish-born Tamils : a study of young Tamil LondonersAntony, Richard2012The present study concentrates on the lifestyles and experie~ces of British-born young Tamils, and explores various components of their identities. Not many sociological studies have been condu~ted on the Tamil community in Britain. The study approaches its subject area through combining detailed ethnographic and interview research on young British Tamils with a consideration of wider arguments relating to ethnicity, migration, diaspora and youth. The findings are organised in terms of the four key themes of traditional culture, friendship, media, and politics, each one combined with relevant conceptual and empirical theorisations. Diasporic theories help to understand broader trends relating to various aspects of identity and these contribute towards the development of theories on minority youth inter-culture and newethnicities. Specifically, the study focuses on British-born young Tamils based in London, aged between 16 - 29. The ethnography focuses on their cohesiveness as a group, their relationship with parents and traditional Tamil culture and with other elements of British society, including White British youth culture and ethnic minority youth cultures. This qualitative study deploys research techniques together with interviews and ethnographic observations to examine current understanding of cultural identities, ethnicity and community. The analysis highlights the complex and dynamic nature of the identities of the young respondents and their experiences of being British-Tamils. The notion of hybridisation starts to figure quite strongly with the development of intercultural forms of mixed identities relating to the maintenance of traditional culture, friendship patterns and media interests. Interestingly however, young Tamils' political engagement with recent political events has developed a greater awareness of their Tamil identity and politicised youth ethnicity than before. The implications may be observed in terms of a greater impact upon their future cultural orientations - an increase In Tamil media usage, more interest in their mother tongue and the development of connections with the transnational Tamil community. ii.305.9069120941University of Surreyhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.560501Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 305.9069120941
spellingShingle 305.9069120941
Antony, Richard
British-born Tamils : a study of young Tamil Londoners
description The present study concentrates on the lifestyles and experie~ces of British-born young Tamils, and explores various components of their identities. Not many sociological studies have been condu~ted on the Tamil community in Britain. The study approaches its subject area through combining detailed ethnographic and interview research on young British Tamils with a consideration of wider arguments relating to ethnicity, migration, diaspora and youth. The findings are organised in terms of the four key themes of traditional culture, friendship, media, and politics, each one combined with relevant conceptual and empirical theorisations. Diasporic theories help to understand broader trends relating to various aspects of identity and these contribute towards the development of theories on minority youth inter-culture and newethnicities. Specifically, the study focuses on British-born young Tamils based in London, aged between 16 - 29. The ethnography focuses on their cohesiveness as a group, their relationship with parents and traditional Tamil culture and with other elements of British society, including White British youth culture and ethnic minority youth cultures. This qualitative study deploys research techniques together with interviews and ethnographic observations to examine current understanding of cultural identities, ethnicity and community. The analysis highlights the complex and dynamic nature of the identities of the young respondents and their experiences of being British-Tamils. The notion of hybridisation starts to figure quite strongly with the development of intercultural forms of mixed identities relating to the maintenance of traditional culture, friendship patterns and media interests. Interestingly however, young Tamils' political engagement with recent political events has developed a greater awareness of their Tamil identity and politicised youth ethnicity than before. The implications may be observed in terms of a greater impact upon their future cultural orientations - an increase In Tamil media usage, more interest in their mother tongue and the development of connections with the transnational Tamil community. ii.
author Antony, Richard
author_facet Antony, Richard
author_sort Antony, Richard
title British-born Tamils : a study of young Tamil Londoners
title_short British-born Tamils : a study of young Tamil Londoners
title_full British-born Tamils : a study of young Tamil Londoners
title_fullStr British-born Tamils : a study of young Tamil Londoners
title_full_unstemmed British-born Tamils : a study of young Tamil Londoners
title_sort british-born tamils : a study of young tamil londoners
publisher University of Surrey
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.560501
work_keys_str_mv AT antonyrichard britishborntamilsastudyofyoungtamillondoners
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