Diaspora-ish
Notes on Identities, Unbelonging, & Solidarities
A collective learning resource that offers inquiries about diasporic identity and belonging aimed at practicing global solidarity
What does it mean to be in diaspora? How do our identities and aspirations for belonging unfold during times of collective upheaval?
In her lifelong search for solidarity, educator Gayatri Sethi draws upon her own complex diasporic journey to explore widely accepted ideas about identity and belonging. Spanning three continents and multiple phases of the author’s life, Diaspora-ish offers inquiries into many facets of identity—names, relationships, ethnicities, citizenships—and poignantly demonstrates how these are weaponized to exclude and other. Addressing prevalent misconceptions about immigration, Sethi pushes for a deeper understanding of migration and diaspora that centers decoloniality and anti-imperialism. Diaspora-ish is an urgent call to unlearn oppressions in order to work bravely toward collective liberation.
In an extension of her genre-bending nonfiction debut Unbelonging, Sethi juxtaposes personal observations with academic notes and inquiries to guide readers through paradigm shifts in learning. Diaspora-ish presents an anti-imperial, anti-racist, collective learning resource that centers historically marginalized and excluded global realities.
Loved by our collective!
Diaspora-Ish is a genre-bending work that interrogates the colonial forces lurking in our families, schools, and deep within ourselves. It's pages are a warm hug to those on the margins and a loving admonition not to be fooled by the "friendlier" faces of empire. The academy will not save us. Assimilation will not save us. Sethi urges us to accept nothing short of the crumbling of walls, the eraducation of borders, and the total liberation of the land from the river to the sea. For fans of "Palestine 1492" and students of Franz Fanon, Audre Lorde, W.E.B. Du Bois, bell hooks, and Edward Said.
Content Warnings: Discussions of structural and interpersonal violence
Product Details
- Type
- Paperback
- ISBN
- 9781949528053
- Publisher
- First Person Press (2/3/26)



