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[Commlist] CFP Agency, Community, Kinship - Representations of Migration Beyond Victimhood
Wed Dec 08 12:39:22 GMT 2021
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AGENCY, COMMUNITY, KINSHIP –
REPRESENTATIONS OF MIGRATION BEYOND VICTIMHOOD
Interdisciplinary Online Symposium, February 23–24, 2022
University of Wuppertal, Germany
Following the work of Michaela Maroufof and Hara Kouki (2017, 78),
“[m]igration must be understood as a complex social process that is also
shaped by the agency of the migrants.” Agency, however, is often
neglected in seemingly benevolent discourses that portray migrants
primarily as passive and helpless victims. Similarly, researchers often
tend to disregard the various “tactics” (cf. de Certeau 1984) that
migrants use to navigate and even modify spaces of sovereignty. While it
is crucial to expose the ways in which biopolitics and necropolitics
frame migrant lives as disposable and thus shape the everyday
experiences of migrants around the globe, it is equally important to
highlight how migrants assert their agency and thereby challenge the
dehumanizing tendencies of hegemonic culture. Engin Isin (2018, 2021),
for example, has identified what he calls “transversal movements” as
subversive moments that migrants create to disrupt exercises of
sovereignty and biopower. Drawing on the works of Ludek Stavinoha, Koen
Leurs, and Martina Tazzioli, he argues that it is primarily in the
digital sphere that migrants act as (digital) political subjects by
performing alternative versions of citizenship outside of traditional
borders of the nation state.
It is, however, not only through these digital practices that migrants
assert their agency. At the heart of many of these efforts lie kinship
formations that can not only be advanced and mediated through different
technologies but are frequently established on a personal level and
through storytelling and other cultural practices as well. As Francesca
Decimo and Alessandra Gribaldo (2017, 9) maintain, “the politics of
kinship represents a crucial dimension in shaping identities and a
powerful cultural repertoire that intersects with national borders and
citizenship requirements.” As such, kinship is inextricably linked to
notions of belonging and nonbelonging, familiarity and difference, power
and oppression – concepts which continue to inform discourses on
migration, citizenship, and (national) identity. While it is partly
based on a set of normative rules, we argue that kinship can be more
productively understood as a constantly shifting network of relations, a
transformative practice, and a powerful tool that migrants can use to
assert their agency.
During this interdisciplinary symposium, we want to examine the
interplay between agency and kinship in (self-)representations of
migrants in both fictional and factual narratives. By discussing migrant
identity discourses in different cultural and medial contexts, we seek
to explore the ways in which these texts negotiate and challenge the
unequal distribution of mobility, resources, and vulnerability that
preconfigures many migrant lives. In particular, we want to discuss
narrative and representational strategies that migrants employ as well
as technologies that they draw upon to lay powerful claims on space and
citizenship.
Possible topics for papers may include but are not limited to:
individual and/or/versus collective assertions of migrant agency
artistic, literary, and cinematic representations of migrant agency,
community, and kinship technology’s role in furthering or preventing
migrant agency and kinship; social media, the Internet, smartphones
activism
space, geography, and mobility; transnational communities and
connectivities
necropolitics and biopolitics as well as their subversion through acts
of agency and kinship formation
politics, governmental agencies, and NGOs, and their influence on
migrant agency and kinship
technological changes to borders, increasing militarization and
privatization of border regimes, etc.
representations of migrant families and other forms of kinship among
migrants
the legacies of colonialism versus postcolonial and decolonial
perspectives
migration and kinship and/in the Anthropocene; climate dispossession,
climate refugees, ecocritical perspectives
silences and absences; questions of accessibility empirical research
and lived experiences
epistemic perspectives; knowledge production through technology and
through kinship
citizenship and (non)belonging, mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion
and their subversion
asserting agency and creating familial bonds in and through life writing
legal perspectives (migration law)
room for agency within the legal sphere
Covid-19 and other medical crises and their impact on migrant agency
and kinship
gender, race, class, (dis)ability, sexuality, poverty, etc. as
different perspectives on migration, agency, and kinship
If you are interested in presenting a paper (20 mins) at this symposium,
please send an abstract (max. 300 words) and a short bio (max. 100
words) to (espinoza /at/ uni-wuppertal.de), (gebauer /at/ uni-wuppertal.de), and
(wewior /at/ uni-wuppertal.de).
The deadline for proposals is DECEMBER 12, 2021. Feedback can be
expected within two weeks.
While we kindly ask participants to present their findings in English,
we are interested in presentations that focus on representations of
migration, agency, and kinship outside of the English-speaking world as
well. We particularly encourage submissions from researchers from
migrant communities, from underrepresented groups or regions, from the
Global South, from non-tenured researchers, researchers early in their
research career, independent scholars or scholars returning from career
breaks.
Due to the Covid-19 pandemic but also to allow people with less funding
opportunities to participate, this symposium will be held online. We aim
for an accessible, diverse, and family friendly conference. Please don’t
hesitate to contact us anytime if you have any questions.
Organized by: Lea Espinoza Garrido, Carolin Gebauer, Julia Wewior
Narrative Research Working Group, Center for Narrative Research,
University of Wuppertal
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