Statelessness after Arendt

European refugees in China and the Pacific during the Second World War

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Manchester University Press
Edited by Kolleen Guy, Jay Winter
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This book is a study of statelessness in the period of the Second World War. It breaks new ground by focusing not on Europe, but on the Asian and Pacific theatres of the conflict. This perspective enables us to go beyond Hannah Arendt’s classic account of statelessness in her Origins of Totalitarianism.

To her, statelessness was the product of a failed European nation-state system. We find a very different story when we examine the history of stateless people, many of them Jews, fleeing to Asia from Europe. In Asia, we see that being stateless was not a uniform experience, but a variety of possibilities reflecting the political structure of the states and cities in which refugees found shelter. We find too that stateless people managed to enter the political realm long before they reached the threshold of citizenship.

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Contributor Bio

Kolleen Guy is Associate Professor of Humanities and Division Chair of Arts and Humanities at Duke Kunshan University.

Jay Winter is Charles J. Stille Professor of History emeritus at Yale University and Distinguished Senior Teaching Scholar at Duke Kunshan University.

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