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Full Description
Identities on the Move interrogates the categories given and adopted by people on the move through a transdisciplinary and global approach that includes social and political sciences and the arts. It brings together experiences of displacement from a variety of cultural and national backgrounds, including Brazilians, Chinese, Koreans, South Italians, Africans, Muslims, Arabophobe migrants, Iranians, Pakistanis, Bosnians, Latin Americans and Eastern Europeans. It looks at their identity-negotiating processes in different geographies across the globe, namely Japan, UK, Palestine, Italy, Australia, Europe and North America. This multi-geographical and multi-disciplinary approach allows us to decentralise previous narratives of migration by reformulating them against coloniality and invisibility and presenting them within a richer and changing contemporary map of dynamic identities. The global scale of the case studies included in this volume also allows for a wider exploration of thematic concepts within the (trans)formation of displaced identities, such as assimilation versus alienation, memory and trauma, stigmatisation, enculturation, acculturation and deculturation. In a nutshell, this volume highlights current complexities of identity formation in a global scene that is moving away from homogenous nations by presenting a multi-layered and multi-spatial notion of belonging.
Contents
Chapter 1. Am I the school I attend? Understanding the Self-Identity Construction of Immigrant-Origin Youths in Japan (Giulia Dugar).- Chapter 2. South-Italian Youth in North-West England: Constructing the 'Good Migrant' alongside the 'Good Adult'? (Stefano de Barone).- Chapter 3. Erased Narratives of Care: Migrant Women's Urban Experiences Beyond Stigmatisation (Alice Ranzini).- Chapter 4. The Speech of Migrant Women. Audibility in Public as a Performative Exercise of Citizenship (Rosa Gatti).- Chapter 5. Staging Migrant Identity in Spanish Contemporary Theatre: Cultural Reconstruction from Aesthetic Drama towards Social Ritual (Ivana Krpan).- Chapter 6. From Intercultural Dialogue to a Global Imaginary: A Review of Hossein Valamanesh's Artworks (Raika Khorshidian).- Chapter 7. Re)Inventing Oneself: A Rhizomatic Exploration of Bosnian Migration Through Auto/Ethnography (Nikola Lero).- Chapter 8. Writing the self: in the spirit of decolonisation through autoethnography (Fazila Bhimjji).- Chapter 9. The Afro-Palestinians of Jerusalem and the Palestinian Nation (Moritz A Mihatsch).