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[ecrea] Call for Chapters - Migration by Boat
Mon Jun 24 22:48:54 GMT 2013
Call for chapters: Migration by Boat: theories, politics, and memories -
EDITED Collection
Seeking original chapters for a collection tentatively titled, Migration
by Boat: theories, politics, and memories, which will explore ocean
travel undertaken by refugees, asylum seekers and illegal immigrants as
a space and place where cultures intersect, and national boundaries and
identities are reshaped, both in painful and creative ways. Migration by
boat can symbolically be aligned with notions of deterritorialization
that often support fears, yet also allow for renegotiations of identity,
memory and feelings. Contributions from a multidisciplinary cohort are
welcome. Authors are encouraged to submit provocative original writing
(conceptual, empirical or theoretical) that emphasize how migration by
boat is remembered and represented; effects individual and social or
cultural identity; and challenges or reinforces cultural or social
structures. Deadline for abstracts of 500-750 words, together with a
short CV including contact details, and one example of previously
published work in a relevant field is September 30, 2013.
Unregulated movements of people via ocean voyages are often viewed as
threatening to the solidarity of the national spaces that they arrive
in, so much so that these arrivals have the power to wash away
humanitarian sentiments. Increasingly, scholars are attempting to
understand how “transnational flows of people, media and commodities”
(Escobar 2001) can be viewed outside of standard dualistic terms and
away from clear-cut juxtapositions of citizen/stranger, land/water, and
victim/threat. Symbolically, boats can be viewed as spaces and places
where hopes and fears along with “poetics and politics are mobilized”
(Perera 2013). In this context, boats carrying asylum seekers, refugees,
and illegal immigrants not only move people and cultural capital between
places, but also fuel cultural fantasies, dreams of adventure and hope,
along with fears of invasion and terrorism. Oceanic voyages also
represent liminal periods were human beings are “betwixt and between”
(Turner 1969) real lives and national identities, nevertheless,
communities are formed and relationships are fostered while en route.
Possible themes (not a restrictive list) might include: How are arrivals
of asylum seekers by boat represented in media portrayals, visually or
discursively? Symbolic and emotional elements related to migration by
boat. Rethinking place and space in relation to bodies of water. The
effects of migration by boat on identity in relation to gender, race,
class, etc. Narratives and memories related to forced migration and
travel by boat? The “boat” as saviour/home/refuge, and conversely, the
“boat” as traumatic experience. How have representations of migrations
by boat shifted with the digital revolution? Have representations of
migrations by boat changed in the era of globalization? How can the
elusive nature of travel by boat be compared to, or juxtaposed the
elusive nature of memory. Trauma and migration through ocean passages.
How is this narrated, visualized and politicized? The intersections of
identity, nation, citizenship and ocean travel. Travel by boat as a
mediator of personal, social and/or cultural transformation, in both
modern and historical contexts. Representations of migration by boat in
popular culture, movies, literature, art, performances etc.
Chapters should be written in English and should not have been
previously been published. Each final chapter will be between 6,000-7500
words (including references). Images are welcome. However, authors will
be responsible for obtaining all rights for the publication of
photographs etc. as well as research interviews that were undertaken
(forms will be provided later).
Deadlines: September 30, 2013: Send abstracts of 500-750 words, together
with a short CV including contact details, and one example of previously
published work in a relevant field. December 15, 2013: Acceptance
letters will be sent to authors. May 30, 2014: Submission of chapters.
Please submit all expressions of interest and abstracts/CVs to
(lyndamannik /at/ trentu.ca) Preferably with the subject line: Migration by Boat
Dr. Lynda Mannik is a Visiting Assistant Professor in cultural
anthropology at Trent University. She recently published Photography,
Memory and Refugee Identity: the voyage of the S.S. Walnut, 1948 with
the University of British Columbia Press. Through memories and
photographs it explores the experiences of Estonian refugees, who
migrated from Sweden to Canada in search of a safe haven after Stalin
occupied their homeland. Their 32-day voyage across the Atlantic is
central to understanding how identity and memories shift in conjunction
with the in-between spaces that are created through forced migration and
across geographical spaces. Mannik has also co-edited a volume titled,
Reclaiming Canadian Bodies: Representation and Visual Media, which looks
at how representations of Canadian bodies are constructed and performed
within the context of visual and discursive mediated content (Wilfrid
Laurier Press, 2014). Her chapter compares two photographic portrayals
in the Canadian press, the arrival of the Walnut in 1948 and the arrival
of the Amelie in 1987, to demonstrate how refugees’ bodies are used to
visually promote timely state ideologies, and also to establish and
control types of ‘ethnic others’ that are granted inclusion. Mannik is
also the author of Canadian Indian Cowboys in Australia: Representation,
Rodeo and the RCMP at the Royal Easter Show, 1939 (University of Calgary
Press, 2006) and has published in Visual Studies, and Memory Studies.
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