This issue edited by Jeffrey S. Librett with Ahmad Nadalizadeh as assistant editor.
“Writing migration”: our title comprises a mixture of heterogeneous terms, like a mixed metaphor, insofar as movement of peoples seems so concrete, as movement of living, breathing subjective spirits, while writing remains abstract; the former so alive, the latter—the letter--so dead. Or so we usually think, even without having to think it. We know that migration experiences can be written down, but we think of the migration and the writing as two fundamentally different types of experiences, two quite different types of thing. Our point of departure in the organization of this special issue was—in contrast to these overly simple conventions—a curiosity about the ways in which the two structurally intersect: writing migrates, and migration writes.
“Writing migration”: our title comprises a mixture of heterogeneous terms, like a mixed metaphor, insofar as movement of peoples seems so concrete, as movement of living, breathing subjective spirits, while writing remains abstract; the former so alive, the latter—the letter--so dead. Or so we usually think, even without having to think it. We know that migration experiences can be written down, but we think of the migration and the writing as two fundamentally different types of experiences, two quite different types of thing. Our point of departure in the organization of this special issue was—in contrast to these overly simple conventions—a curiosity about the ways in which the two structurally intersect: writing migrates, and migration writes.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Jeffrey S Librett
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1-10
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Articles
Amadou Oury Ba
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11-28
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Dorothee Ostmeier, Michael Malek Najjar
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29-51
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Sabine Scholl
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52-62
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Jocelyn Aksin
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63-82
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Mert Bahadir Reisoğlu
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83-99
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Araceli Masterson-Algar
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100-127
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Benjamin Mier-Cruz
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128-151
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Thomas Nail
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152-173
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Review Essays
Joscha Klueppel
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174-180
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