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[Commlist] Call for Papers: 'Forms, Limits and Future Directions of Storytelling in Migration Research'
Tue Jul 07 21:12:15 GMT 2026
Call for Papers: Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture
Special Issue: 'Forms, Limits and Future Directions of Storytelling in
Migration Research'
Issue editors: Lena Englund (University of Eastern Finland) and Kaiju
Harinen (Migration Institute of Finland, University of Turku)
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/crossings-journal-of-migration-culture#call-for-papers
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/crossings-journal-of-migration-culture#call-for-papers>
Much of migration research in the social sciences and humanities has
been centred on bringing to light the experiences and stories of
individuals and groups who have been marginalized, misrepresented or
sometimes outright ignored in official discourse and dominant
narratives. Stories can both reinforce existing societal discourses as
well as function as a counterforce. That makes stories and storytelling
a tool with which to perform political work in terms of how migration is
debated and portrayed. Studies in the humanities build on storytelling
in relation to the material examined, people interviewed or otherwise
engaged with, and in the published research itself. Storytelling is here
understood in a broad sense of the term, used for personal
self-understanding, meaning making and communication, but also in
politicized contexts, for example relating to how migration and migrants
are addressed and depicted in the media. Migration is understood broadly
as the movement of people in both voluntary and involuntary contexts,
and limits are not to be seen as boundaries that may not be traversed,
but also as a chance to probe further, to test new theoretical
frameworks and to bring together case studies in novel ways.
Cultural studies, among other fields of study, have often been geared
towards giving voice to groups or individuals in the margins (Pickering
2018). The act of ‘giving voice’ may be problematic (Stonebridge 2021),
and it can also include practices of ‘deaf listening’ that is selective
as to what stories it acknowledges (Jolly 2010). Various kinds of
‘instrumentalization’ of someone’s story (Propst 2020: 4) requires
further attention, relating to questions of who is doing the giving of
voice, who is the receiver, what constitutes the hierarchical
relationship between the two actors and the limits of their cooperation.
Societal narratives for their part appeal to people’s feelings,
contextualized historically and culturally (Chaban et al. 2023). Yet,
stories do not always make much difference politically even if designed
to do so (Polletta 2023; Kurz 2015). While storytelling can bring people
together, it may also cause rifts and divides, even to the extent of
becoming an act of violence against the original storyteller sharing
their experience (Jackson 2008). The responsibility of researchers is
thus considerable.
From a methodology perspective, this special issue is particularly
interested in the limits and future directions of storytelling in both
participatory as well as more textual contexts. Textual analysis centres
on making sense of self and the world, a culturally and temporally
specific practice, emphasizing the need to study time and place in
relation to storytelling about migration. Participatory research methods
may include decolonial perspectives on storytelling, and this issue
welcomes critical examination of such approaches. In decolonial studies,
scholars are encouraged to critically analyse the power relations and
colonial structures embedded in storytelling and to engage with more
marginalized epistemic practices. In doing so, a decolonial perspective
calls into question the very existence of objective research as such.
Journalism, too, engages in storytelling and in depicting migration in
multiple ways for different purposes, drawing on a variety of methods
that are relevant for this special issue. The documentary narrative
hopes to depict ‘reality’ (Diaz 2021), which inevitably also means that
the journalist’s voice narrating the story influences how the other is
represented. The term documentary as a noun is generally applied to film
but it can also be seen as a practice or method.
This special issue offers the opportunity to think further about what
defines, restrains and generates storytelling in migration research in
the humanities. Papers are invited from scholars as widely as possible,
encouraging inter- and multidisciplinary approaches to storytelling in
migration research about the challenges and limits involved with for
example textual approaches, participatory methods and activist research.
Theoretical engagements with storytelling in various contexts are
welcome, as are studies relating to methodological concerns. Case
studies of cultural expressions (e.g. fiction or nonfiction, films, the
media) relating to the theme of the special issue are also much
appreciated. Possible topics have been listed below, but the issue is
not limited to these only.
Suggested topics:
*
The ethics of storytelling
*
The politics of storytelling
*
Storytelling and cultural memory
*
Limits of representation
*
Forms of storytelling
*
Disciplinary boundaries in migration research
*
The researcher as storyteller
*
Autoethnographic limits/boundaries
*
The future of migration research
*
Researcher activism/advocacy and solidarity
*
Gendered stories
*
Diasporic identities
*
The limits of terminology (migrant, migration, refugee, mobility etc)
*
Victim/villain dichotomies
*
Migration in the media
*
Artificial Intelligence in storytelling about migration
*
Intersubjective processes in migration research
*
Storytelling and polycrisis
Notes for contributors:
Abstracts of 300–500 words with brief author bios should be sent by 30
September 2026 to (lena.englund /at/ uef.fi) <mailto:(lena.englund /at/ uef.fi)> and
(kaiju.harinen /at/ utu.fi) <mailto:(kaiju.harinen /at/ utu.fi)>.
Full articles should be 6000–8000 words long (including notes,
references, author biography, keywords and abstract). Submissions are
expected to be original work not under consideration by other publishing
outlets and will be sent out for anonymous peer review.
See https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/98048/1/CJMC_NFC_Oct_25.pdf
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/98048/1/CJMC_NFC_Oct_25.pdf>.
Timeline:
Abstracts: 30 September 2026
Decisions: 15 October 2026
Full papers: 28 February 2027
Editorial comments: March 2027
Papers ready for review:April 2027
Publication: late 2027
References:
Chaban, Natalia, Zhabotynska, Svitlana and Knodt, Michèle (2023), ‘What
makes strategic narrative efficient: Ukraine on Russian e-news
platforms’, Cooperation and Conflict, 58:4, pp. 419-440,
https://doi.org/10.1177/001083672311612
<https://doi.org/10.1177/001083672311612>.
Diaz, Liliana Chavez (2021),Latin American Documentary Narratives: The
Intersections of Storytelling and Journalism in Contemporary Literature,
London: Bloomsbury.
Jackson, Michael (2008), Politics of Storytelling: Variations on a Theme
by Hannah Arendt, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Jolly, Rosemary (2010), Cultured Violence: Narrative, Social Suffering,
and Engendering Human Rights in Contemporary South Africa, Liverpool:
Liverpool University Press.
Kurz, Katja (2015), Narrating Contested Lives: The Aesthetics of Life
Writing in Human Rights Campaigns, Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter.
Pickering, Michael (2008), ‘Experience and the social world’, in M.
Pickering (ed.), Research Methods for Cultural Studies, Edinburgh:
Edinburgh University Press, p. 17-31.
Polletta, Francesca (2023), ‘Personal storytelling in social movements’,
in P. Dawson and M. Mäkelä (eds), The Routledge Companion to Narrative
Theory, New York: Routledge, pp. 104-116.
Propst, Lisa (2020), Marina Warner and the Ethics of Telling Silenced
Stories, Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press.
Stonebridge, Lyndsey (2021), Writing and Righting: Literature in the Age
of Human Rights, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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