Crossings: Migrant Knowledges, Migrant Forms

dc.contributorEDITOR: Din-Kariuki, Natalya; orcid: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7575-6644; University of Warwick
dc.contributor.editorMukherji, Subha
dc.contributor.editorDin-Kariuki, Natalya
dc.contributor.editorWilliams, Rowan
dc.date.accessioned2025-11-07T04:56:03Z
dc.date.available2025-11-07T04:56:03Z
dc.date.issued2025-10-03
dc.date.updated2025-11-07T04:56:01Z
dc.descriptionPublication status: ACTIVE
dc.description.abstractCrossings: Migrant Knowledges, Migrant Forms brings together activists, artists, scholars, and migrants with diverse histories to explore what the experience of migration does with, and to, knowledge, and how its own ways of knowing find expressive form. As the volume’s authors think about physical and imaginative crossings, and the traversals and transactions of knowledge they entail, the book itself crosses and complicates disciplinary and formal boundaries and the barriers between critical and creative intervention. Crucially, it brings together voices and forms emerging out of the experience of dislocation with responses to the encounters it generates. The volume’s discussions begin in the early modern world, and move freely across periods to dwell on the urgent experience of migrancy in our own times, while also responding to an urgent need to connect the local with the global experience of migrant knowledge and migrant aesthetics. Crossings stakes the claim that creative art, backed by humanities-based thinking, can meet the imaginative and ethical demands that the unknowable reality of mass displacement places on us, in a way that governments, institutions, and public discourse have calamitously failed to do. But aesthetic practice itself needs to be re-positioned if it is to rise to these political and human challenges, negotiating the points of friction between its own predilections and the matter of migration. Crossings offers “migrant forms” – art about migration, objects from migrant life shaped into artifacts, and migrant self-expressions – as the means of this imaginative re-orientation, and a tool for activating a radical alternative to economic models of social benefit. Crossings takes its place in an emergent ecology of migrant forms, both speaking to and participating in that ecology.
dc.description.versionVoR
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.53288/0417.1.00
dc.identifier.isbn9781685712808
dc.identifier.isbn9781685712815
dc.identifier.other1841b54c-b495-4bb5-9bcf-054e5c393af3
dc.identifier.urihttps://thoth-arch.lib.cam.ac.uk/handle/1811/922
dc.languageENG
dc.publisherpunctum books
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
dc.subjectLIT019000
dc.subjectSOC007000
dc.subjectSOC008000
dc.subjectDSBC
dc.subjectJBCC7
dc.subjectJBFH
dc.subjectanthropology
dc.subjectasylum
dc.subjectdecoloniality
dc.subjectearly modern studies
dc.subjectexile
dc.subjectmigration
dc.subjectrefugee crisis
dc.titleCrossings: Migrant Knowledges, Migrant Forms
dc.typehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2f33
dcterms.accessRightsEmbargo: none
organization.legalNameUniversity of Cambridge

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