Against Shame: Refugee Life Stories from Italy and Britain c. 2000

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Against Shame : Refugee Life Stories from Italy and Britain c. 2000. / Leese, Peter.

Migrant Emotions: Inclusion and Exclusion in Transnational Spaces. Liverpool : Liverpool University Press, 2024. p. 203-219 (Migrations and Identities).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Leese, P 2024, Against Shame: Refugee Life Stories from Italy and Britain c. 2000. in Migrant Emotions: Inclusion and Exclusion in Transnational Spaces. Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, Migrations and Identities, pp. 203-219.

APA

Leese, P. (2024). Against Shame: Refugee Life Stories from Italy and Britain c. 2000. In Migrant Emotions: Inclusion and Exclusion in Transnational Spaces (pp. 203-219). Liverpool University Press. Migrations and Identities

Vancouver

Leese P. Against Shame: Refugee Life Stories from Italy and Britain c. 2000. In Migrant Emotions: Inclusion and Exclusion in Transnational Spaces. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. 2024. p. 203-219. (Migrations and Identities).

Author

Leese, Peter. / Against Shame : Refugee Life Stories from Italy and Britain c. 2000. Migrant Emotions: Inclusion and Exclusion in Transnational Spaces. Liverpool : Liverpool University Press, 2024. pp. 203-219 (Migrations and Identities).

Bibtex

@inbook{8ae2f460d6654f66bd2d495031a24e98,
title = "Against Shame: Refugee Life Stories from Italy and Britain c. 2000",
abstract = "In the late 1990s and early 2000s, faced with the new globalisation of goods, services and peoples, Italy and Britain sought to reassert the supposed sovereignty and racialized hierarchies of their colonial pasts. Refugees arriving in Britain and Italy increasingly felt the effects of this shift in hostile news coverage and anti-{\textquoteleft}asylum seeker{\textquoteright} state policies, which trivialised or ignored their motives, journeys and experiences. In response, some refugees turned to self-representation as advocacy and rights activism. This chapter follows social and cultural historian Graham Dawson{\textquoteright}s injunction to complicate and expand our understandings of {\textquoteleft}lived emotions{\textquoteright} by exploring in depth two particular self-representations of migrant emotions related to inclusion and exclusion. To achieve this the chapter uses a comparative methodology in the analysis of two migrant self-representations. First, Dagmawi Yimer{\textquoteright}s {\textquoteleft}Our Journey{\textquoteright} (2013), by an Ethiopian who settled in Italy (2006). Second, Vesna Maric{\textquoteright}s Bluebird (2010), which describes a Bosnian teenager{\textquoteright}s early years in Britain (1992-6). Both Yimer and Maric examine how they were {\textquoteleft}misread{\textquoteright} by their host societies and the sensations of shame, fear and resentment this produced. Both represent their singular, but also communal experiences to expand imaginative sympathy, to make sense of, and to help interpret as well as resolve difficult pasts.",
author = "Peter Leese",
note = "As acknowledged in the book, this is an version of Chapter 5 in my monograph 'Migrant Representations: Life Story, Investigation, Picture' published in 2022. Also in the LUP series 'Migrations and Identities'. This chapter was originally due for publication before my book, but for various practical reasons was delayed.",
year = "2024",
month = sep,
day = "1",
language = "English",
series = "Migrations and Identities",
publisher = "Liverpool University Press",
pages = "203--219",
booktitle = "Migrant Emotions",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Against Shame

T2 - Refugee Life Stories from Italy and Britain c. 2000

AU - Leese, Peter

N1 - As acknowledged in the book, this is an version of Chapter 5 in my monograph 'Migrant Representations: Life Story, Investigation, Picture' published in 2022. Also in the LUP series 'Migrations and Identities'. This chapter was originally due for publication before my book, but for various practical reasons was delayed.

PY - 2024/9/1

Y1 - 2024/9/1

N2 - In the late 1990s and early 2000s, faced with the new globalisation of goods, services and peoples, Italy and Britain sought to reassert the supposed sovereignty and racialized hierarchies of their colonial pasts. Refugees arriving in Britain and Italy increasingly felt the effects of this shift in hostile news coverage and anti-‘asylum seeker’ state policies, which trivialised or ignored their motives, journeys and experiences. In response, some refugees turned to self-representation as advocacy and rights activism. This chapter follows social and cultural historian Graham Dawson’s injunction to complicate and expand our understandings of ‘lived emotions’ by exploring in depth two particular self-representations of migrant emotions related to inclusion and exclusion. To achieve this the chapter uses a comparative methodology in the analysis of two migrant self-representations. First, Dagmawi Yimer’s ‘Our Journey’ (2013), by an Ethiopian who settled in Italy (2006). Second, Vesna Maric’s Bluebird (2010), which describes a Bosnian teenager’s early years in Britain (1992-6). Both Yimer and Maric examine how they were ‘misread’ by their host societies and the sensations of shame, fear and resentment this produced. Both represent their singular, but also communal experiences to expand imaginative sympathy, to make sense of, and to help interpret as well as resolve difficult pasts.

AB - In the late 1990s and early 2000s, faced with the new globalisation of goods, services and peoples, Italy and Britain sought to reassert the supposed sovereignty and racialized hierarchies of their colonial pasts. Refugees arriving in Britain and Italy increasingly felt the effects of this shift in hostile news coverage and anti-‘asylum seeker’ state policies, which trivialised or ignored their motives, journeys and experiences. In response, some refugees turned to self-representation as advocacy and rights activism. This chapter follows social and cultural historian Graham Dawson’s injunction to complicate and expand our understandings of ‘lived emotions’ by exploring in depth two particular self-representations of migrant emotions related to inclusion and exclusion. To achieve this the chapter uses a comparative methodology in the analysis of two migrant self-representations. First, Dagmawi Yimer’s ‘Our Journey’ (2013), by an Ethiopian who settled in Italy (2006). Second, Vesna Maric’s Bluebird (2010), which describes a Bosnian teenager’s early years in Britain (1992-6). Both Yimer and Maric examine how they were ‘misread’ by their host societies and the sensations of shame, fear and resentment this produced. Both represent their singular, but also communal experiences to expand imaginative sympathy, to make sense of, and to help interpret as well as resolve difficult pasts.

M3 - Book chapter

T3 - Migrations and Identities

SP - 203

EP - 219

BT - Migrant Emotions

PB - Liverpool University Press

CY - Liverpool

ER -

ID: 385111483