Agnus Dei - No. 7 from "Mass No. 11 in A major"

Agnus Dei - No. 7 from "Mass No. 11 in A major" book cover

Agnus Dei – No. 7 from "Mass No. 11 in A major"

Author(s): Rashmi Luthra (Author)

  • Publisher: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN REGIONAL
  • Publication Date: January 4, 2024
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 210 pages
  • ISBN-10: 047205645X
  • ISBN-13: 9780472056453

Book Description

Deindustrialized cities in the United States are at a particular crossroads when it comes to the contest over refugees. Do refugees represent opportunity or danger? These cities are in desperate need to stem population and resource loss, problems that an influx of refugees could seemingly help address. However, the cities are simultaneously dealing with local communities that are already feeling internally displaced by economic and technological flux. For these existing citizens, the prospect of incoming refugee populations can be perceived as a threat to financial, cultural, and personal security.

Few U.S. locations provide a more vivid case study of this fight than Metro Detroit, where competing interest groups are waging war over the meaning of the figure of the refugee. This book dives deeply into the discourse on refugees occurring among various institutions in Metro Detroit. The way in which local institutions talk about refugees gives us vital clues as to how they are negotiating competing pressures and how the city overall is negotiating competing imperatives. Indeed, this local discourse gives us a crucial glimpse into how U.S. cities are defining and redefining themselves today. The figure of the refugee becomes a slate on which groups with varied interests write their stories, aspirations, and fears. Consequently, we can figure out from local refugee discourses the ongoing question of what it means to be a Metro Detroiter—and by extension, what it means to be a revitalizing U.S. city in this age.

Editorial Reviews

Review

2025 University of Michigan Press Book Award Winner

University of Michigan Press

Destination Detroit provides an important case study of refugee discourses in deindustrialized cities. . . Recommended.” — Choice

“Well-structured content, engaging prose, and analyses based on locally relevant and historically important events are only a few among the positives of the book. The title is good to be included in the readings for graduate courses on international migration and refugee studies, communication, political science, and other related disciplines in social science.” ― Rajiv Aricat, International Journal of Communication

Review

“In Destination Detroit, Rashmi Luthra presents us with a carefully researched case study of Detroit as a site of refugee arrival and the construction of a refugee discourse, which always draws on Orientalist discourses of the ‘third world other’ and the superiority or savior subjectivity of the local. Luthra illuminates how specific moments of tensions were used by actors to try to fan the winds of Islamophobia, and how some of these efforts were more successful than others given organization at the grassroots and previous histories of conviviality. This book is a must-read book for scholars across a wide range of disciplines, from Border Studies to Media Studies.” — Angharad N. Valdivia, Institute of Communications Research and Latina Latino Studies Department at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

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