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Mediatized Transient Migrants: Korean Visa-Status Migrants' Transnational Everyday Lives and Media Use

Part of the Korean Communities across the World series
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Mediatized Transient Migrants: Korean Visa-Status Migrants' Transnational Everyday Lives and Media Use examines the role of digital media in Korean visa-status migrants' everyday lives in terms of their senses of home, belonging, and identity. Based on personal interviews with 40 migrants (temporary workers, academic students, and their dependents) living in Austin, Texas, Claire Shinhea Lee argues that the mundane use of homeland media brought by new media technology allows these migrants to make, connect to, and complicate home in their transnational space.

Through the theoretical framework of mediatization and transnationalism, Lee links a transnational polymedia environment and emerging digital culture (cord-cutting and algorithmic culture) to interrogate mobility and migration in the globalization era. The book reveals not only the multi-positionality within the transient migration but also the gendered structure of the visa system.

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£108.00
Product Details
Lexington Books
1498598501 / 9781498598507
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
26/11/2019
English
180 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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