توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Black Mediterranean: Bodies, Borders and Citizenship
نام کتاب : The Black Mediterranean: Bodies, Borders and Citizenship
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : مدیترانه سیاه: اجساد ، مرزها و شهروندی
سری : Mediterranean Perspectives
نویسندگان : Gabriele Proglio, Camilla Hawthorne, Ida Danewid, P. Khalil Saucier, Giuseppe Grimaldi, Angelica Pesarini, Timothy Raeymaekers, Giulia Grechi, Vivian Gerrand
ناشر : Palgrave Macmillan / Springer
سال نشر : 2021
تعداد صفحات : 267
ISBN (شابک) : 9783030513900 , 9783030513917
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 4 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Contents
Notes on Contributors
List of Figures
Chapter 1: Preface
After ‘the Mediterranean’
After the Black Atlantic
References
Chapter 2: Introduction
The Black Mediterranean
Theoretical and Methodological Scope
The Black Mediterranean Collective
Overview of the Volume
References
Part I: Borders
Chapter 3: When the Mediterranean “Became” Black: Diasporic Hopes and (Post)colonial Traumas
“This Is Not Italy, This Is Africa.” The Mediterranean Category in the Aftermath of Unification
Polluted Blood and the Mediterranean Race
Africa, Italy, and Fascism: The Whitening of Italians and the Resignification of the Mediterranean Category
Racial Laws and Refugees
“We Are Not in Italy, Are We?” Postcolonial Traumas in the Black Mediterranean
Conclusions: Diasporic Memories in the Black Mediterranean
References
Chapter 4: Fanon in the Black Mediterranean
Introduction
On Violence
The Wretched of the Mediterranean
White History and Black Subjectivity
Strategies for a Theoretical Engagement with the Black Mediterranean
Conclusions
References
Chapter 5: Colonial Cultural Heritage and Embodied Representations
Throwing the Body into the Struggle
(Post)colonial Remains
Mum, I’m Sorry
As Far as My Fingertips Take Me
Post-Scriptum: On Who Writes, Writing from the Body, and the Body of the Artist or the Intellectual
References
Part II: Bodies
Chapter 6: Carne Nera
I.
II.
Political Economy
Politics of Race
III.
IV.
References
Chapter 7: Impermanent Territories: The Mediterranean Crisis and the (Re-)production of the Black Subject
Introduction: The Mediterranean as a Grey Space
Bordering the Liquefied
Casa Sankara
Becoming European
Conclusion: Concessionary Politics
References
Chapter 8: “These Walls Must Fall”: The Black Mediterranean and the Politics of Abolition
Introduction
“At the Bottom of the British Cuppa”: Migration and the Making of Capitalist Modernity
Borders and the “Racial Break”
“These Walls Must Fall”: From Hospitality to Abolition
Conclusion
References
Part III: Citizenship
Chapter 9: L’Italia Meticcia? The Black Mediterranean and the Racial Cartographies of Citizenship
Locating the Black Mediterranean in Italian Citizenship Struggles
Chapter Outline
Mediterraneanism, Meticciato, and the Making of Italians
The Twenty-First Century Mediterranean (Re)Turn
Migrants, the Mediterranean, and the Burning Palms of Milan
Racing Citizenship in the Black Mediterranean
From Citizenship Struggles to Diasporic Ethics
Afterword: The Relevance of the Black Mediterranean in the Time of Monsters
References
Chapter 10: Reimagining Citizenship in the Black Mediterranean: From Jus Sanguinis to Jus Soli in Contemporary Italy?
State Citizenship in the Twenty-First Century
Conceptualising Citizenship in the Black Mediterranean
Chapter Outline
Who Is Italian Today?
Official Discourses of Italianness in a Fertility Campaign
Sharing Outrage
“Italians First, Work First”
Italian ‘Good Sense’
Reimagining Citizenship: An Encounter Between Researchers, Writers and Politicians
Kaha Mohamed Aden’s In-Between Understandings
Cadigia Hassan’s ‘La Bambina Salvata dal Coccodrillo’
Fred Kuwornu’s 18 jus soli
Antar Mohamed Marincola’s Timira
Former Member of Parliament Marilena Fabbri on Italian Citizenship Law Reform: A Government Perspective
The Jus Culturae Provision
Jus Soli Temperato Citizenship as an Investment
Demographic Considerations
Public Support for Citizenship Law Reform
Increased Competition?
Jus Soli: Towards Social Inclusion
Remedying the Current Catch 22
Conclusion
References
Interviews
Visual Media
Chapter 11: The Habesha Italians: The Black Mediterranean and the Second-Generation Condition
Introduction
The Second-Generation Condition
Second Generations or Differential Italians?
From the Horn of Africa to Italy: Habesha in the Black Mediterranean
The Postcolonial Condition and the Second-Generation Condition: Family Resemblances
Children of Domestic Workers
Downward Assimilation: Why Should a Milanese Habesha Speak Neapolitan?
Racial Differentiation, Gender, Class: The Making of the Habesha Second-Generation Condition
Ragazzi di Zona: The Class Connotation of the Habesha Identification
The Habesha Dark Side: Second-Generation Condition and Gender Divide
Resignifications: Appropriating the Term Habesha as the Marker of the Second-Generation Condition
Via Kramer: Habesha Spaces and the Second-Generation Condition
When Diaspora Breaks Down, the Second-Generation Condition Does Not
The Muretto: Habesha as an Italian Phenomenon
Habesha Party: Celebrating the Second-Generation Condition
Conclusions: The Salience of the Second-Generation Condition in the Black Mediterranean
References
Index