Vidura Jang Bahadur is a photographer and is currently pursuing a PhD in Communication Studies in the program of Rhetoric and Public Culture at Northwestern University, Evanston. Bahadur’s doctoral dissertation, Invisible Citizens, explores the role image-making practices play in shaping how we imagine our individual and collective identities and how these constructions influence our participation and belonging within the diverse communities and spaces we inhabit. Image-making practices refers to a set of visual technologies that inform and are part of both state practices and the encounters that characterize vernacular life. Through an ethnographic study of Indian Chinese families in India and in the Indian diaspora in the United States and Canada, Bahadur interrogates the complex and often competing forces by which individuals imagine broader collectivities and their place within them. This is important, especially in an age of mass dis/relocation and rising ethno-religious nationalisms that often lay an emphasis on visible signs of racial and ideological homogeneity. Over the last two decades Bahadur has lived and worked in India, China, Tibet, and the United States. He is also the co-founder of the DesiChineseProject, a living archive of the Chinese community in India. http://vidurajangbahadur.com/, https://www.desichineseproject.com/