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For centuries the people of African have been on the move, seeking
new opportunities, fleeing from dangers, or tragically uprooted
through human greed and cruelty. In the twenty-first century, with
over 40 million people migrating from and within Africa each year,
it is clear that migration still has a significant impact on every
aspect of African life. For this reason, Sarali Gintsburg and Ruth
Breeze in their new book, African Migrations: Traversing Hybrid
Landscapes, explore the hybrid landscapes of African migration and
provide new insights into the complexity of migratory movements and
migrant experiences associated with the African continent. Taking
the view that the only ecologically valid way to understand
migration is by looking at it through the eyes of the migrants
themselves, the authors draw on a wide spectrum of first-hand
evidence from a multitude of sources, including testimonies, media
artefacts, workplace experiences, interviews, and ethnographic
observations. The contributors reflect on a wide array of themes
linked to the African context, such as diasporic mapping of
landscapes, hybridity, heterotopia, métissage, cultural mixing,
and complementation. This book presents the African continent not
only in its cultural diversity but also to cover the complex and
wide trajectories of migrations to, from and within Africa.
This book clarifies the crucial role of periodical press in the
advance of colonial print cultures and public debates in the Indian
and Pacific Oceans. The Colonial Periodical Press in the Indian and
Pacific Ocean Regions is a venture of the International Group for
Studies of Colonial Periodical Press of the Portuguese Empire
(IGSCP-PE), which also invests on comparative studies and
conceptual discussions. Moving around urban shores of the Indian
and Pacific Oceans, it approaches the crucial role of periodical
press in the development of colonial print cultures and public
debates in these regions. By being mostly focused on press from
spaces and peoples under the domain of the Portuguese Empire, it
addresses a bibliographical gap in international discussions moved
by the field. The outcome reflects an investment in offering
decentred and de-nationalized approaches to the colonial print
cultures and press histories under study, working as a platform for
regional dialogues and comparative perspectives. The studies
presented allow a better understanding of transits and connections
both of an imperial and of a trans-imperial nature, contributing to
the consolidation of comparative approaches in the studies of
European empires and colonialisms. This volume is indispensable for
scholars and students in Media Studies, Modern History, Cultural
Studies, Literary Studies and Political Science.
This volume brings together interviews on the topic of the
postcolonial nation and its narrations with prominent writers from
Angola and Mozambique. The interviewees offer personal insights
into the history of post-independence Angola and Mozambique and
into the role of the intellectual elite in the complex processes of
deconstructing colonial heritage and (re)constructing national
identity in a multinational or multiethnic state. Their testimonies
provide a parallel narrative that complements the many fictional
narrators found in Angolan and Mozambican novels, short stories and
poems. The authors interviewed in the book are Luandino Vieira, Ana
Paula Tavares, Boaventura Cardoso, Jose Eduardo Agualusa, Ondjaki
and Pepetela from Angola; and Joao Paulo Borges Coelho, Marcelo
Panguana, Mia Couto, Paulina Chiziane, Ungulani Ba Ka Khosa and
Luis Carlos Patraquim from Mozambique.
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