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How media and conflicts make migrants / Kirsten Forkert, Federico Oliveri, Gargi Bhattacharyya and Janna Graham.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Forkert, Kirsten, author.
- Oliveri, Federico, author.
- Bhattacharyya, Gargi, 1964- author.
- Graham, Janna, author.
- Series:
- Manchester University Press
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Emigration and immigration.
- Refugees.
- Social conflict.
- Mass media and world politics.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (ix, 230 pages) : illustrations; digital file(s).
- Edition:
- 1st ed.
- Place of Publication:
- Manchester, UK : Manchester University Press, 2020.
- System Details:
- data file
- Summary:
- The book explores how we understand global conflicts as they relate to the "European refugee crisis", and draws on a range of empirical fieldwork carried out in the UK and Italy. It examines how global conflict has been constructed in both countries through media representations - in a climate of changing media habits, widespread mistrust, and fake news. In so doing, it examines the role played by historical amnesia about legacies of imperialism - and how this leads to a disavowal of responsibility for the causes why people flee their countries. The book explores how this understanding in turn shapes institutional and popular responses in receiving countries, ranging from hostility-such as the framing of refugees by politicians, as 'economic migrants' who are abusing the asylum system; to solidarity initiatives. Based on interviews and workshops with refugees in both countries, the book develops the concept of "migrantification" - in which people are made into migrants by the state, the media and members of society. In challenging the conventional expectation for immigrants to tell stories about their migration journey, the book explores experiences of discrimination as well as acts of resistance. It argues that listening to those on the sharpest end of the immigration system can provide much-needed perspective on global conflicts and inequalities which challenges common Eurocentric misconceptions. Interludes, interspersed between chapters, explore these issues in another way through songs, jokes and images.
- Contents:
- Front matter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: conflict, media and displacement in the twenty-first century
- How postcolonial innocence and white amnesia shape our understanding of global conflicts
- Interlude 1: Global power and media absences
- War narratives: making sense of conflict
- Interlude 2: Songs, jokes, movies and other diversions
- Social media, mutual aid and solidarity movements as a response to institutional breakdown
- Interlude 3: How it feels to be made a migrant: restrictions, frustration and longing
- The processes of migrantification: how displaced people are made into 'migrants'
- Interlude 4: Telling stories about war differently
- Refusing the demand for sad stories
- Conclusion: unsettling dominant narratives about migration in a time of flux
- Bibliography
- Index.
- Notes:
- Cover title has refguees and asylum seekers struckthrough.
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Description based on print version record and e-publication, viewed September 16, 2020.
- ISBN:
- 9781526138149
- 152613814X
- 9781526138125
- 1526138123
- OCLC:
- 1151767795
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