Contemporary Representations of Forced Migration in Europe, 1st ed. 2024
Beyond Regime and Refuge

Palgrave Studies in Literature, Culture and Human Rights Series

Coordinators: Barclay Fiona, Ivey Beatrice

Language: English
Cover of the book Contemporary Representations of Forced Migration in Europe

Subjects for Contemporary Representations of Forced Migration in Europe

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313 p. · 14.8x21 cm · Hardback

This book engages with current debates around refugeedom by examining cultural production that represents and interrogates the construction of refugees and the refugee experience on the borders of contemporary Europe. The refugee subject is produced by discursive regimes and border practices inherited from colonial projects that construct the diametrically opposed concepts of citizen and refugee, and their attendant administrative sub-categories. In the early twenty-first century these categories have been strengthened by the politicisation of forced migration and the hardening of ?Fortress Europe?.

While the predominant response to the increasing numbers of refugees seeking asylum in Europe has been to harden the borders (regime), on the one hand, or to stress the common humanity of those displaced (refuge), on the other, this volume argues that both approaches result in refugees becoming objectified, othered, and abstracted as vectors of exile. It explores what recent cultural production can achieve in engaging with and representing issues of dispossession, detention and resettlement, and probes the limits of artistic potential to mediate the refugee experience. It examines transnational approaches to cultural production that both occupy and exceed the borders of Europe, with a focus on borderscapes, spaces of detention, and (neo-)colonialism. Bringing together original contributions from an international range of scholars, it analyses contemporary textual and visual representations of forced migration to argue that other forms of solidarity and hospitality towards refugees in Europe and beyond must be possible.


1. Introduction.- 
Part I Art and Activism by and with Refugees.- 
2. The Trojans Project: Therapeutic Drama from Syria to Scotland.- 
3. Channelling and Challenging the ‘imperative to tell’: Reflections on Negotiating Representations of Refugeeness from Practice-Based Performance Research.- 
4. ‘To live well is to story well’: Co-writing and Polyphonic Writing with Denmark’s Asylum Community.- 
5. Life in Detention: Journey and Border.- 
6. Carceral Witnessing and the Spatial Imagination.- 
Part II Challenging Representations of Refugees.- 
7. ‘She is the meteor and I, her space’: Co-Becoming and Biopolitical Trauma in Chris Abani’s Becoming Abigail.- 
8. Unsettled: Narrative Strategies in Exhibitions About the ‘Refugee Crisis’.- 
9. Archaeologies of Nonentity in Aki Kaurismäki’s The Other Side of Hope.- 
10. Beyond Objectifying the Humane: Memory in Media and Political Genres.- 
11. Wolves in the Sanctuary: Ecopolitics and Forced Migration in the Literature of the Anthropocene.- 
12. Remapping the Borderlands of Britain: The Calais “Jungle” and the Enduring Legacy of Imperial Frontier Policing.- 

Dr Fiona Barclay is Senior Lecturer in French Studies at the University of Stirling, UK. She has published widely on memories of colonial and postcolonial migration, including Writing Postcolonial France: Haunting, Literature, and the Maghreb (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2011), and France's Colonial Legacies: Memory, Identity and Narrative (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2013).

Dr Beatrice Ivey is a Learning Designer at the University of Leeds, UK. As a researcher in French and Francophone Studies her work explores the transcultural memory of French colonialism across literatures from France and North Africa.

Theorises the transnational situatedness of refugees on the borders of contemporary Europe

Brings together original contributions from a wide range of scholars

Probes the limits of artistic potential to mediate the refugee experience