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[ecrea] New issue of Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture 7.2
Tue Feb 07 15:29:04 GMT 2017
Intellect is delighted to announce the new issue of /Crossings: Journal
of Migration & Culture 7.2 /is now available.
For more information about this issue, clickhere
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=173/> or email
(katy /at/ intellectbooks.com) <mailto:(katy /at/ intellectbooks.com)>
Articles in this issue include (partial list):
Working with migrants’ memories in Italy: The Lampedusa dump
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=22941/>
*Authors: *Allesandro Triulzi
Page Start: 149
The Archive of Migrant Memories aims at recording and diffusing migrant
self-narratives in Italy so as to leave a visible trace of recently
arrived migrants and their rising agency in Italian society. Retrieving
oral and written records of migrants travelling to and landing on
Italian soil intends to contrast, both physically and metaphorically,
the hiding or cancellation mechanisms lying behind the collective unease
surrounding immigration policies in today’s Italy. The recurrent dumping
of migrant lives in the Mediterranean, particularly on its European
southernmost gate at Lampedusa, symbolises the careless disposal of
irksome memories of migration within present-day Italian society. Here
the remains of rotten boats derived from the repeated landings of
irregular migrants on the Island and their human ‘waste’ – old shoes,
clothes, cooking utensils, children’s toys, throw-away objects, but also
water-stained documents, photos, holy books and individual writings such
as letters, memoirs or diaries – lie to decompose as a vivid expression
of what is not to be remembered in the nation’s past.
The experience of the Askavusa Association: Migrant struggle with
cultural activities
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=22942/>
*Authors: *Ilaria Vecchi
Page Start: 165
In this article Vecchi examines the history and main developments of the
Askavusa Association, founded in 2009 in Lampedusa, the southernmost
Italian territory, on the southern edge of Europe. As one of the most
active and interesting collectives supporting the migrant struggle in
Italy, Askavusa has received attention for its various activities held
in Lampedusa and abroad, and especially for the organisation of the
LampedusaInFestival and the collection of migrants’ objects in PortoM.
As an activist and member of the group, in this article Vecchi
concurrently identifies some of the limits of the actions organised by
the collective. As such, this article represents the natural outcome of
the author’s participation and collaboration with Askavusa, combined
with an analysis of several interviews collected in Lampedusa over the
years.
Reframing the debate: The art of Lampedusa
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=22945/>
*Authors: *Maya Ramsay
Page Start: 209
This article considers the art that has been produced in relation to the
subject of migrant deaths at sea, with a focus on artworks that refer to
the island of Lampedusa and its long history of the subject. Now that
the world’s media are at last paying attention to the subject of migrant
deaths, the small islands of Lampedusa and Lesbos are in danger of being
‘invaded’ by more than just migrants – artists are on their way in
ever-increasing numbers. The ‘migration crisis’ has become the latest
hot topic for artists, but art on the subject of migrant deaths at sea
is often controversial, dividing both critics and audiences. Written
from the perspective of an artist, this article explores the
complexities of making and presenting art about this extremely sensitive
issue.
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