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Full Description
Life writing often explores the profound impact of border crossings, both physical and metaphorical. Writers navigate personal and cultural boundaries, reflecting on identity, belonging, and the transformative power of crossing thresholds. These narratives unveil the complexities of migration, immigration, or internal journeys, offering intimate perspectives on adapting to new environments or confronting internal conflicts. Un/Bound is a collection of essays about such narratives, with an emphasis on mobility and border metaphors, the ethical dimensions of cross-border storytelling, and questions of access, translation, and circulation. Scholarly interest in borders, mobility, and related topics has greatly intensified in the context of public health emergencies and recent conflicts in international relations. The chapters in this book contribute to this dialogue by exploring internal and external, and physical and abstract borders and divisions.
This book will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of literature, translation studies and political philosophy. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of a/b: Auto/Biography Studies.
Contents
Introduction 1. Resisting Confinement Through Translation: Behrouz Boochani's No Friend But the Mountains 2. Flawed Border Crossings in Life Writing by Fabienne Kanor and Gisèle Pineau 3. Visual Culture and Diasporic Self -Writing: Wajdi Mouawad Paints His Way Home 4. Archives in Motion: Transitional Sites of Identity in Narratives of Displacement 5. "The Distance ... That Had Been Traversed": Education, Identity, and Public Literacy in Tara Westover's Educated and Richard Rodriguez's Hunger of Memory 6. "A Home in My Body": Migration, Infection, and Privilege in Porochista Khakpour's Sick 7. Teaching Women's Auto|Bio Stories: Student Engagement through Creative, Multimodal Storytelling—Fostering Inclusion and Diversity through Transcultural Stories of Migration and Change 8. Loss Made Visible: Women's Graphic Memoirs and the Boundlessness of Grief