Abstract
In many countries across the globe, people have been recurrently forced to leave their homes for religious, ethnic, and sociopolitical reasons. Some others have chosen to leave their homeland and native society without being forced to do so, their voluntary exile being facilitated by a general feeling of estrangement, foreignness, or dissatisfaction with the home culture and ruling system. Yet, such exiles sometimes find it impossible or hard to go back to their homeland because no political and/or cultural change occurs in the country. Furthermore, exile has become a social experience due to the increasing number of emigrants, and exiles have a tendency to develop the formation of national associations in the host country, and they, accordingly, establish a readership that makes it possible for them to publish newspapers, journals, and books.1
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© 2014 Götz Nordbruch and Umar Ryad
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Alsulami, M. (2014). Iranian Journals in Berlin during the Interwar Period. In: Nordbruch, G., Ryad, U. (eds) Transnational Islam in Interwar Europe. The Modern Muslim World. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137387042_7
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