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dc.contributor.authorMusiol, Hanna
dc.date.accessioned2021-10-22T06:20:08Z
dc.date.available2021-10-22T06:20:08Z
dc.date.created2020-09-11T22:54:26Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.identifier.citationEnvironment, Space, Place (ESP). 2020, 12 (2), 1-30.en_US
dc.identifier.issn2066-5377
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11250/2824838
dc.description.abstractThis article focuses on mapping and spatial thinking in migrant storytelling and knowledge-making across diverse border infrastructures. Set against the carceral regimes' investment in migration research, schooling, and aesthetics in the US and Europe, this project turns to diverse, smaller—and larger-scale counter-cartographic projects: To Whom It May Concern (2013), Zakaria Mohamed Ali's cinematic map of his return to the Lampedusa detention site; Migrant (2014), a children's book and a codex about undocumented migrants on the Mexico-to-US journey, by José Manuel Mateo and Javier Martínez Pedro; Torn Apart / Separados (2018), a Mobilized Humanities polyrhythmic cartographic intervention; and public storytelling and pedagogical initiatives in Norway (2016–19). Drawing on the work of Laura Lo Presti, this article examines how these projects activate complex affordances of cartography that expand beyond its basic instrumental uses. Maps can express simultaneously diverse spatiopolitcal subjectivities and relations in symbolic, multisensorial, and metacritical ways. As such, they can represent the personal, intimate, local migrant experience as always emplaced in macro-scale geopolitical, infrastructural, and institutional geographies. Therefore, such acts of migrant storytelling often become acts of spatiopolitical reflection and critique. Most important, the discussed projects are as concerned with narrating bodies, networks, and relations on the map as they are with transforming the habits of sociocultural reception of and off the map. They encourage new listening and interpretation practices that engender new reception environments, socioaesthetic and politico-legal alike. The article concludes with a meditation on the place-changing and sociopolitical promise of such understood narrative “cartographic acts” (Brian Holmes) and pedagogy to create noncarceral sites of encounter.en_US
dc.language.isoengen_US
dc.publisherUniversity of Minnesota Pressen_US
dc.relation.urihttps://doi.org/10.5749/envispacplac.12.2.0001
dc.titleCartographic Storytelling, Migration, and Reception Environmentsen_US
dc.typePeer revieweden_US
dc.typeJournal articleen_US
dc.description.versionpublishedVersionen_US
dc.rights.holderThe published version of the article will not be available due to copyright restrictions by University of Minnesota Pressen_US
dc.source.pagenumber1-30en_US
dc.source.volume12en_US
dc.source.journalEnvironment, Space, Place (ESP)en_US
dc.source.issue2en_US
dc.identifier.doi10.5749/envispacplac.12.2.0001
dc.identifier.cristin1829309
cristin.ispublishedtrue
cristin.fulltextoriginal
cristin.qualitycode1


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