Cultures of Mobility and Alterity: Crossing the Balkans and Beyond
Cultures of Mobility and Alterity: Crossing the Balkans and Beyond
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Abstract
Advancing public dialogue surrounding the issues of migrants and refugees, the volume explores the dynamic representations of the recent movement of people from and through the Balkans. It investigates how people within the Balkans view their others, how the West regards the Balkans, and how emigrants from the Balkans reflect upon their experiences as members of cosmopolitan diasporic communities. Highlighting latent tensions between center and periphery and furthering the discussion of racialization related to the Balkans, the collection exposes contradictions in social values, which give rise to national anxieties. To analyze mobility to, from, and in the Balkans requires one to address the issue of race, difference, and otherness as it relates to South East Europe and as it is understood and reproduced in both transnational and local forms. The racialized category of “migrant” necessitates an understanding of how transnational concepts of race translate into constructs of whiteness and blackness and inform subject positions of the individual and motivate discourses of racialization within communities. Approaching mobility from multiple disciplines, the volume examines several instances of border flows in media, literature, and culture in general, flows of ideas and people.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: Mobility and the Fantasies and Fears of Others
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Part I Racializing Borders and Legacies: Multidisciplinary Interventions
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1
(Re)Imagining Solidarities, (Re)Imagining Serbia: South–South Student Mobility and the “World in Serbia” Project
Sunnie Rucker-Chang
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2
Migrants, Moral Panic, and Uneven Development in Croatia
Katarina Peović
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3
Immigration and Intersectionality: Postsocialist Women’s Theatre in the United States
Oana Popescu-Sandu
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1
(Re)Imagining Solidarities, (Re)Imagining Serbia: South–South Student Mobility and the “World in Serbia” Project
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Part II The Balkan Migration Experience in Diaspora and Border Literature
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Part III Western and Balkan Media Responses to Migrants and Refugees
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7
The Roma as Deixis of Emotionality: Salient Politics and Exclusionary Media Discourse in the United Kingdom, Italy, and France
Liviu Popoviciu andRuxandra Trandafoiu
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8
Emergent Ethno-Cultural Hierarchies: CNN, BBC, and DW Coverage of the Balkan Route Crisis
Randall Rowe
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9
Refugees and TV Current Affairs Journalism: The Epistemology of Conventions
Breda Luthar
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7
The Roma as Deixis of Emotionality: Salient Politics and Exclusionary Media Discourse in the United Kingdom, Italy, and France
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End Matter
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