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This edited volume explores the idea of Europe through a focus on its margins. In doing so, the volume stresses the need to consider Europe from critical interdisciplinary perspectives, highlighting historical and contemporary issues of racism and colonialism.
List of contents
1. Creating Europe from the Margins: Introduction 2. Articulating Europe from the Sephardic Margin: Restoring Citizenship for Expulsed Jews, and not Muslims, in Spain? 3. Racist and Imperial Genealogies in LGBT-free Zones and Struggles over Europe in Poland 4. 'From Nowhere to Nowhere' - Mapping Trajectories of Belonging within the Post-Yugoslav Field 5. On the Margins of Europe: Migration and Sicilian Liminality 6. Digital Media and Migration: Reflections from the Southern Margins of Europe 7. Gay Bod: Civic and LGBTQ+ Pride after Brexit in a City on the Margins of the UK and Europe 8. Marginalized Bodies in Caribbean Europe: Between Vital Inequalities and Health (Im)mobilities 9. Marketing Marginality: Creating Iceland as a White Privileged Destination 10. Making Europe from Below: Intra EU-Migration and Mobilities Connecting the Margins 11. When the Margins Enter the Centre: The Documentary
Along the Borders of Turkey and its YouTube Comments as Conflicting Constructions of Europeanity 12. Beating the Border: Playing with Migrant Experiences and Borderveillant Spectatorship in Channel 4's
Smuggled (2019)
About the author
Kristín Loftsdóttir is Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Iceland. Her research has focused on notions of exceptionalism, racialization of mobility, racism, gender, crisis, globalization, nationalism, migration and postcolonial Europe. Her publications include
Crisis and Coloniality at Europe's Margins: Creating Exotic Iceland (Routledge, 2019) and
We Are All African Here: Race, Mobilities and West Africans in Europe (2021), and co-author of
Exceptionalism (Routledge, 2021). She is also co-editor of
Whiteness and Postcolonialism in the Nordic Region: Exceptionalism, Migrant Others and National Identities (Routledge, 2012),
Crisis in the Nordic Nations and Beyond: At the Intersection of Environment, Finance and Multiculturalism (Routledge, 2014), and
Messy Europe: Crisis, Race and the Nation State in a Postcolonial World (2018). She is currently the Principal Investigator of the CERM (Creating Europe through Racialized Mobilities) project.
Brigitte Hipfl is Associate Professor Emerita in the Department of Media and Communication Studies at the University of Klagenfurt, Austria. Her research explores media, gender, race, and the affective dynamics of media with a focus on issues related to migration, conviviality, solidarity, and memory work. She is co-editor of
Messy Europe: Crisis, Race and the Nation State in a Postcolonial World (2018),
Wir und die Anderen: Visuelle Kultur zwischen Aneignung und Ausgrenzung (2020),
Handbuch Medien und Geschlecht: Perspektiven und Befunde der feministischen Kommunikations- und Medienforschung (2023), and
Intersektionale Solidaritäten: Beiträge zur gesellschaftskritischen Geschlechterforschung (2023).
Sandra Ponzanesi is Chair and Professor of Media, Gender and Postcolonial Studies in the Department of Media and Culture Studies at Utrecht University, Netherlands, where she is also the founding director of the PCI (Postcolonial Studies Initiative). She has published widely in the field of media, postcolonial studies, digital migration, and cinema, with a particular focus on Postcolonial Europe from comparative and interdisciplinary perspectives. She is author of
Paradoxes of Postcolonial Culture: Contemporary Women Writers of the Indian and Afro-Italian Diaspora (2004) and
The Postcolonial Cultural Industry: Icons, Markets, Mythologies (2014). She is also editor of
Gender, Globalization, and Violence: Postcolonial Conflict Zones (Routledge, 2016) and co-editor of numerous other edited collections, including
Postcolonial Transitions in Europe (Rowman and Littlefield 2016),
Postcolonial Cinema Studies (Routledge, 2012) and
Deconstructing Europe: Postcolonial Perspectives (Routledge, 2012). She has also edited several special issues on digital migration, cinema, and Europe for a range of peer-reviewed journals.
Summary
This edited volume explores the idea of Europe through a focus on its margins. In doing so, the volume stresses the need to consider Europe from critical interdisciplinary perspectives, highlighting historical and contemporary issues of racism and colonialism.