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Asylum

Asylum
Asylum
This chapter describes the refugee experience through alternative documentation in a century that has seen a sharp escalation of anti-immigration policy and rhetoric in Europe, Australia and North America. Contending with this hostile political climate, fictional representations of contemporary asylum and displacement eschew simplified legal and media forms, giving narrative shape to the complex dynamics evoked by Yaguine Koita’s and Fode Tounkara’s letter to Europe. The chapter suggests that three lenses through which writing about asylum and displacement might be viewed. First, a thematic shift away from a migrant identity that draws exclusively on ‘bonds of language, religion, culture and a sense of common history’. Second, an exploration of how contemporary migrant identity is shaped by an emerging topography of precarious migration, including the sea crossing, the refugee camp and the territorial border zone. Third, the challenge of documenting the undocumented in contemporary fiction marks a turn to self-reflexive narrative forms.
Routledge
Woolley, Agnes
fbb69867-9f5e-4ea5-9155-653c1ba223b8
O'Gorman, Daniel
Eaglestone, Robert
Woolley, Agnes
fbb69867-9f5e-4ea5-9155-653c1ba223b8
O'Gorman, Daniel
Eaglestone, Robert

Woolley, Agnes (2018) Asylum. In, O'Gorman, Daniel and Eaglestone, Robert (eds.) The Routledge Companion to Twenty-First Century Literary Fiction. 1 ed. Routledge. (doi:10.4324/9781315880235-23).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

This chapter describes the refugee experience through alternative documentation in a century that has seen a sharp escalation of anti-immigration policy and rhetoric in Europe, Australia and North America. Contending with this hostile political climate, fictional representations of contemporary asylum and displacement eschew simplified legal and media forms, giving narrative shape to the complex dynamics evoked by Yaguine Koita’s and Fode Tounkara’s letter to Europe. The chapter suggests that three lenses through which writing about asylum and displacement might be viewed. First, a thematic shift away from a migrant identity that draws exclusively on ‘bonds of language, religion, culture and a sense of common history’. Second, an exploration of how contemporary migrant identity is shaped by an emerging topography of precarious migration, including the sea crossing, the refugee camp and the territorial border zone. Third, the challenge of documenting the undocumented in contemporary fiction marks a turn to self-reflexive narrative forms.

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Published date: 18 December 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490337
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490337
PURE UUID: 6880d963-a99c-4902-99b3-5c1fb32e0138
ORCID for Agnes Woolley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0796-8199

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Date deposited: 23 May 2024 16:57
Last modified: 28 May 2024 02:07

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Contributors

Author: Agnes Woolley ORCID iD
Editor: Daniel O'Gorman
Editor: Robert Eaglestone

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