Roger Bromley is Emeritus Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Nottingham, UK, and, formerly, Visiting Professor in the Department of English and Creative Writing at Lancaster University, UK. He is the author of Narratives for a New Belonging: Diasporic Cultural Fictions (2000) and a number of other books and scholarly articles.
1 Introduction
Political and Theoretical Context
Textual Methods
The Im/Mobilities Paradigm
Refugee Journeys
Borders
Decoloniality
Global Context
Chapter Outline
References
2 People on the Move: Narratives for a Journey of Hope
Not Belonging and Unwanted
Somewhere in the EU
The Longest Journey
Reversing the Appearance of the Frontier
References
3 Policing Displacement and Asylum: Giving Voice to Refugees
Crisis at the Border
Mapping Separation
Storying the Stranger
Telling the Story Differently
Into the Abyss
Writing a Name in the Sky
Leveraging the Queue as a Technology
References
4 Out of Focus and Out of Place: The Migrant Journey
Telling a Story with a Voiceless Pencil
In the Labyrinth
The European Middle Ages
Calais Context
Framing the Dispossessed
In the Grey Zones
References
5 Restaging the Colonial Encounter: Far-Right Narratives of Europe and African Migrant Responses
White Genocide The Southern Gaze
Elsewhere and Here: Revisiting the Colonial Encounter
Silenced Deaths
Unequal Mobility Regime
References
6. Fragmented Spaces/Broken Time: Restoring the Absence of Story in the
West Bank of Palestine
Time, Space and Mobility
Naziheen, the Displaced Ones
How Distances Always Measure the Same
Plan Dalet
Tracing History
A Jar in Ramallah
Postscript: An Incurable Malady
References