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Abstract
This collection brings together new critical approaches to diaspora studies, branching out to areas such as literary studies, visual culture, and museum studies, and explores them in relation to a variety of fictional works, cultural traditions, theoretical paradigms, and geo-political contexts. The innovation of this volume lies in the interplay of both texts and theoretical insights from these different areas of cultural analysis, drawn together to probe diverse manifestations of diaspora while pointing out new directions of critique. Moving between representations of real and imaginary, violent and utopian, past, present and future diasporas, contributors demonstrate the ways in which authors, performers and artists are establishing new modes of representing and imagining diaspora in an increasingly globalised age. Contributions are organised into sections on performance, speculative fiction, city spaces, affective or violent diasporas, and silence and voice. Bringing together these wide-ranging histories, contexts and media allows for dialogue across vastly divergent experiences and representations of diaspora, and opens up a theoretical debate on the changing nature of this field of study.
New Directions in Diaspora Studies is a major contribution to the field. Contributors from diverse geographic affiliations take an important new step in reassessing the usefulness of diaspora as a theoretical framework. Because of the comparative approach, it will become an important reference for students and scholars.
Chia Youyee Vang, Professor, Department of History, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
New Directions in Diaspora Studies is a brilliant collection that challenges readers to consider new contexts, contestations, formations, and representations of diaspora. In this current moment of rising securitization, white nationalism, and dangerous migrations, this volume offers a timely, critical, and much-needed intervention, paving the way for new discussions and debates.
Amrita Hari, Assistant Professor, Pauline Jewett Institute for Women's and Gender Studies at Carleton University
Sarah Ilott is a Lecturer in English and Film at Manchester Metropolitan University.
Ana Cristina Mendes is an Assistant Professor in English Studies at the University of Lisbon.
Lucinda Newns is a Lecturer in Postcolonial and Contemporary Literature at the University of Manchester.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Contents | 9 | ||
Acknowledgments | 11 | ||
List of Figures | 13 | ||
Preface | 15 | ||
Introduction | 21 | ||
Part I: Performance | 37 | ||
1 Transcultural Performance in Diasporic Contexts | 39 | ||
2 Performing Street Art | 55 | ||
Part II: Speculative Diasporas | 75 | ||
3 Mythology of the Space Frontier | 77 | ||
4 Speculative Diasporas | 91 | ||
Part III: City Spaces | 105 | ||
5 Diasporic Ways of Knowing | 107 | ||
6 Emotional Geographies of London | 123 | ||
7 Everyday Emotions and Migration | 135 | ||
Part IV: Precarious and Silent Diasporas | 149 | ||
8 British New Slaveries in Chris Cleave’s The Other Hand and Caryl Phillips’s In the Falling Snow | 151 | ||
9 Gendered Silence in Transnational Narratives | 167 | ||
Bibliography | 183 | ||
Index | 195 | ||
About the Editors and Contributors | 199 |