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This article links colonial/neocolonial and feminist literature with discourses on international students to examine how a discourse of imperialism constructs and represents international students in U.S. universities. Applying a critical discourse analysis to 78 articles published in the Chronicle of Higher Education between 1996 and 1999, the authors identified three themes of U.S. imperialism: international students as capital, international students as subjugated Others, and imperialism as self-identity. They discuss implications of portrayals of international students through an imperialist lens.
Rhee et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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