From Rupture to Refuge - (Migrations and Identities) by Peter Sloane (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- Ebook available to libraries exclusively as part of the JSTOR Path to Open intiative.From Rupture to Refuge is a wide-ranging study of both contemporary refugee fiction and memoir.
- Author(s): Peter Sloane
- 216 Pages
- Social Science, Emigration & Immigration
- Series Name: Migrations and Identities
Description
Book Synopsis
Ebook available to libraries exclusively as part of the JSTOR Path to Open intiative.
From Rupture to Refuge is a wide-ranging study of both contemporary refugee fiction and memoir. From international best-selling novels such as Khaled Hosseini's The Kite Runner and Christi Lefteri's The Beekeeper of Aleppo, to memoirs by Zoya Phan and Clemantine Wamariya, it follows refugees as they narrate their experiences and memories of homeland, war, escape, camp, and finally finding refuge.
Tracing literary connections between this wide body of 21st Century writing, the book provides an overview of a genre of writing and a detailed textual analyses of thematic and poetic intersections. It also introduces the concept of 'narrative displacement', uncovering the ways in which refugees are discursively displaced from their own tales as well as being displaced spatially. Sloane argues that in writing and recording, refugees replace themselves at the centre of their own life stories.
From Rupture to Refuge will be of particular interest to scholars of refugee writing, migration studies and displacement, as well as life writing and contemporary fiction more broadly.
Peter Sloane is Senior Lecturer in Contemporary Literature at the University of Buckingham, specialising in prose fiction and non-fiction, as well as global cinema.
Review Quotes
"From Rupture to Refuge is an original and sophisticated reflection on an array of different literary works that consider the ordeal of displacement. Above all, Sloane's work offers timely insights into the way that refugees write in order to represent, amplify and come to terms as best they can with this signature experience of our time." Matthew J. Gibney, Elizabeth Colson Professor of Politics and Forced Migration, Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford