1st Edition

Memory and Family in Australian Refugee Histories

Edited By Alexandra Dellios Copyright 2019
    132 Pages
    by Routledge

    132 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book revisits Australian histories of refugee arrivals and settlement – with a particular focus on family and family life. It brings together new empirical research, and methodologies in memory and oral history, to offer multilayered histories of people seeking refuge in the 20th century.



    Engaging with histories of refugees and ‘family’, and how these histories intersect with aspects of memory studies — including oral history, public storytelling, family history, and museum exhibitions and objects — the book moves away from a focus on individual adults and towards multilayered and rich histories of groups with a variety of intersectional affiliations. The contributions consider the conflicting layers of meaning built up around racialised and de-racialised refugee groups throughout the 20th century, and their relationship to structural inequalities, their shifting socio-economic positions, and the changing racial and religious categories of inclusion and exclusion employed by dominant institutions. As the contributors to this book suggest, ‘family’ functions as a means to revisit or research histories of mobility and refuge. This focus on ‘family’ illuminates intimate aspects of a history and the emotions it contains and enables – complicating the passive victim stereotype often applied to refugees.



    As interest in refugee ‘integration’ continues to rise as a result of increasingly vociferous identity politics and rising right-wing rhetoric, this book offers readers new insights into the intersections between family and memory, and the potential avenues this might open up for considering refugee studies in a more intimate way. This book was originally published as a special issue of Immigrants & Minorities.

    Introduction: Memory and Family in Australian Refugee Histories  1. Failing ‘Abyan’, ‘Golestan’ and ‘the Estonian Mother’: Refugee Women, Reproductive Coercion and the Australian State  2. Remembering Mum and Dad: Family History Making by Children of Eastern European Refugees  3. Cossack Identities: From Russian Émigrés and Anti-Soviet Collaborators to Displaced Persons  4. Unravelling Memories of Family Separation Among Sri Lankan Tamils Resettled in Australia, 1983–2000  5. ‘All Those Stories, All Those Stories’: How Do Bosnian Former Child Refugees Maintain Connections to Bosnia and Community Groups in Australia?  6. Weaving a Family and a Nation Through Two Latvian Looms

    Biography

    Alexandra Dellios is a historian at the Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies at the Australian National University.