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Conference

In, on, around, across the Mediterranean: Challenging representation


4 Dec 2020, 4:00pm - 6:30pm

Online

Event overview

Cost free - booking required / Book here
Department Centre for Comparative Literature , English and Creative Writing
Contact english(@gold.ac.uk)

In, on, around, across the Mediterranean: Displacement, ethics and the challenge of representation in fiction, drama, life writing and the visual arts.

Centre for Comparative Literature, Goldsmiths, University of London

Blue skies and sunny beaches – rickety boats perilously crowded with migrants. Space of encounter, cradle of culture – border patrolled by coastguards and drones. The images of the Mediterranean struggle to escape the stereotypes, and the narratives around and across this sea seem to be arranged around recurring binaries: tourist travel – trafficking of migrants; the crowded beach (or the picturesque quiet cove) – the overcrowded refugee camp looking out to a forbidden sea; poverty and destitution – wealth and prosperity; the refugee as victim – the refugee as criminal (or at least scrounger).
How do literature and the arts challenge these perceptions, binaries and stereotypes in representations of migrants and refugees? Can the Mediterranean be re-shaped as a space of possibility and of disruption of assumptions and power structures? How can narratives located in and around the Mediterranean offer resistance and different modes of constructing, or disrupting identities?

This seminar, hosted by the Centre for Comparative Literature at Goldsmiths, University of London, will consider how works of fiction, of life writing, for the theatre, and in visual arts – each focusing on different areas of the Mediterranean – challenge dominant representations to create alternative imaginative spaces of autonomy, dignity and responsibility; how they engage audiences to see beyond the alienation of the other.

Speakers:
Silvia Caserta (University of St. Andrews, UK), “Speaking (up) from the abyss. The Mediterranean middle passage in Lina Prosa’s Lampedusa Beach”

Mariangela Palladino (University of Keele, UK), “‘Etre vraiment vrai’: Exhibiting visual stories of migration in Morocco”

Rita Sakr (Maynooth University, Ireland), “The ethico-politics of mixed-genre, relational life-writing in Atef Abu Saif’s The Drone Eats with Me”

Meritxell Joan-Rodríguez (University of Barcelona and European Institute of the Mediterranean, Spain), “The ‘Mediterranean Borderland’ through the works of Najat El Hachmi”

Chaired by Lucia Boldrini, Director of the Centre for Comparative Literature, Goldsmiths, University of London

Attendance is free but registration is essential.

Book now

Dates & times

Date Time Add to calendar
4 Dec 2020 4:00pm - 6:30pm
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