1st Edition

Languages in Migratory Settings Place, Politics, and Aesthetics

Edited By Alison Phipps, Rebecca Kay Copyright 2016
    144 Pages
    by Routledge

    144 Pages
    by Routledge

    Research on migration has often focused on push and pull factors; and on the mobilities which drive migration. What has often received less attention, and what this book recognises, is the importance of the creative activities which occur when strangers meet and settle for long periods of time in new places. Contributions consider case studies in Italy, Kyrgyzstan, France, Portugal and Australia, as well as taking a careful look at the Commonwealth City of Glasgow. They explore the making and use of literature (for adults and children) of art installations; translation processes in immigration law; education materials; and intercultural understanding. The research reveals the extent to which migration takes a place, and takes different forms, as life is made anew out of intercultural encounters which have a geographical specificity. This shift in focus allows a different lens to be placed on languages, intercultural communication and the activities of migration, and enables the settings themselves to come under scrutiny. This book was originally published as a special issue of Language and Intercultural Communication.

    1. Introduction: Languages in migratory settings: place, politics and aesthetics Alison Phipps and Rebecca Kay

    2. Divorce and dialogue: intertextuality in Amara Lakhous’ Divorzio all’islamica a viale Marconi Mariangela Palladino

    3. Visualizing intercultural literacy: engaging critically with diversity and migration in the classroom through an image-based approach Evelyn Arizpe, Caroline Bagelman, Alison M. Devlin, Maureen Farrell and Julie E. McAdam

    4. The social and symbolic aspects of languages in the narratives of young (prospective) migrants Giovanna Fassetta

    5. Learning across borders - Chinese migrant literature and intercultural Chinese language education Yongyang Wang

    6. Constructing the ‘rural other’ in post-soviet Bishkek: ‘host’ and ‘migrant’ perspectives Moya Flynn and Natalya Kosmarskaya

    7. The migrant patient, the doctor and the (im)possibility of intercultural communication: silences, silencing and non-dialogue in an ethnographic context Elsa Lechner and Olga Solovova

    8. Interpretation, translation and intercultural communication in refugee status determination procedures in the UK and France Robert Gibb and Anthony Good

    Biography

    Alison Phipps is Professor of Languages and Intercultural Studies at the University of Glasgow, UK, and Co-Convener of the Glasgow Refugee, Asylum and Migration Network.

    Rebecca Kay is Professor of Russian Gender Studies at the University of Glasgow, UK, and Co-Convener of the Glasgow Refugee, Asylum and Migration Network.