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Displaced Women Multilingual Narratives Of Migration In Europe 1st Edition Lucia Aiello Joy Charnley Mariangela Palladino

  • SKU: BELL-51288938
Displaced Women Multilingual Narratives Of Migration In Europe 1st Edition Lucia Aiello Joy Charnley Mariangela Palladino
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Displaced Women Multilingual Narratives Of Migration In Europe 1st Edition Lucia Aiello Joy Charnley Mariangela Palladino instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.09 MB
Pages: 217
Author: Lucia Aiello; Joy Charnley; Mariangela Palladino
ISBN: 9781443857543, 1443857548
Language: English
Year: 2014
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Displaced Women Multilingual Narratives Of Migration In Europe 1st Edition Lucia Aiello Joy Charnley Mariangela Palladino by Lucia Aiello; Joy Charnley; Mariangela Palladino 9781443857543, 1443857548 instant download after payment.

The essays included in this volume mostly originate from the conference organised by the editors at Glasgow Women’s Library in March 2012. Language, multilingual narratives and interaction between cultures and languages were key themes of the conference. Interdisciplinary and international, the conference, like this edited volume, brought together specialists working in a range of fields and provided an opportunity for exchanges between historians, sociologists, scientists and literary scholars, as well as between theoreticians and practitioners, academics and non-academics. In spite of these many different approaches, all the papers presented here transcend the idea of ‘national identity’ as an epic heritage or destiny, both linguistic and literary, and suggest a much more fluid definition of citizenship. Working from this perspective and within this general framework, both the editors and the contributors of this volume encourage a broader discussion on women’s narratives of displacement that compels us to rethink the notions of ‘mother tongue’ and ‘native speaker’ and raises philosophical questions about linguistic ownership; in other words, whether a language is owned, appropriated, imposed or rejected and how women experience and express their sense of ‘permanent strangeness’.

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