Mediterranean ARTivism: Art, Activism, and Migration in Europe\ Elvira Pulitano.
Material type:
- 9783031059940
- NX 180 .P85 2023
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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Beykoz Üniversitesi Kütüphanesi | NX 180 .P85 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 00023279 |
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NX 80 S69 2016 Sanat kavram ve terimleri sözlüğü / | NX 165 .S36 2020 Sanat ve Psikoloji Alanında Akademik Çalışmalar/ | NX 180 .P64 T87 2014 Sanat kültür politika : modernizm sonrası tartışmalar / | NX 180 .P85 2023 Mediterranean ARTivism: Art, Activism, and Migration in Europe\ | NX180.S6 S26 2019 Sanat sosyolojisi : kuram ve uygulamalar/ | NX180.S6 W85520 2000 Sanatın toplumsal üretimi / | NX 280 .E77 2016 Sanat kavramlarına giriş / |
This book is an interdisciplinary study aimed at re-imagining and re-routing contemporary migrations in the Mediterranean. Drawing from visual arts, citizenship studies, film, media and cultural studies, along with postcolonial, border, and decolonial discourses, and examining the issues from within a human rights framework, the book investigates how works of cultural production can offer a more complex and humane understanding of mobility in the Mediterranean beyond representations of illegality and/or crisis. Elvira Pulitano centers the discourse of cultural production around the island of Lampedusa but expands the island geography to include a digital multi-media project, a social enterprise in Palermo, Sicily, and overall reflections on race, identity, and belonging inspired by Toni Morrison’s guest-curated Louvre exhibit The Foreigner’s Home. Responding to recent calls for alternative methodologies in thinking the modern Mediterranean, Pulitano disseminates afluid archive of contemporary migrations reverberating with ancestral sounds and voices from the African diaspora along a Mediterranean-TransAtlantic map. Adding to the recent proliferation of social science scholarship that has drawn attention to the role of artistic practice in migration studies, the book features human stories of endurance and survival aimed at enhancing knowledge and social justice beyond (and notwithstanding) militarized borders and failed EU policies.