Roots and Routes; Katalin Henriksson; 2015
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Roots and Routes

av Katalin Henriksson
How do people shape a life in exile? What does nation or homeland mean in such a life situation, and how is the inevitable social and moral turbulence – embedded in the migrant’s biography – employed and interpreted by the migrant herself? This book addresses these issues through an imaginative analysis of five life stories as presented by Hungarian women living in Sweden. The author shows that exile stories revolve around rescuing and restoring things from the past, around reinventing the concept of what is left of a home. The stories speak of lives lived internally, in which one’s present becomes radi-cally different from one’s past and in which a former homeland is transformed into either an idealized or a demonized realm. A society’s grand narratives do not necessarily define an individual’s expe-rience of life in exile. Rather, one must listen to what personal narratives say. Katalin Henriksson is a linguist and narrative analyst in Lund, Sweden. She has spent many years exploring the cultural and symbolic universe of Hungarians in Sweden.
How do people shape a life in exile? What does nation or homeland mean in such a life situation, and how is the inevitable social and moral turbulence – embedded in the migrant’s biography – employed and interpreted by the migrant herself? This book addresses these issues through an imaginative analysis of five life stories as presented by Hungarian women living in Sweden. The author shows that exile stories revolve around rescuing and restoring things from the past, around reinventing the concept of what is left of a home. The stories speak of lives lived internally, in which one’s present becomes radi-cally different from one’s past and in which a former homeland is transformed into either an idealized or a demonized realm. A society’s grand narratives do not necessarily define an individual’s expe-rience of life in exile. Rather, one must listen to what personal narratives say. Katalin Henriksson is a linguist and narrative analyst in Lund, Sweden. She has spent many years exploring the cultural and symbolic universe of Hungarians in Sweden.
Utgiven: 2015
ISBN: 9789176232996
Förlag: Media-Tryck
Format: Häftad
Språk: Engelska
Sidor: 338 st
How do people shape a life in exile? What does nation or homeland mean in such a life situation, and how is the inevitable social and moral turbulence – embedded in the migrant’s biography – employed and interpreted by the migrant herself? This book addresses these issues through an imaginative analysis of five life stories as presented by Hungarian women living in Sweden. The author shows that exile stories revolve around rescuing and restoring things from the past, around reinventing the concept of what is left of a home. The stories speak of lives lived internally, in which one’s present becomes radi-cally different from one’s past and in which a former homeland is transformed into either an idealized or a demonized realm. A society’s grand narratives do not necessarily define an individual’s expe-rience of life in exile. Rather, one must listen to what personal narratives say. Katalin Henriksson is a linguist and narrative analyst in Lund, Sweden. She has spent many years exploring the cultural and symbolic universe of Hungarians in Sweden.
How do people shape a life in exile? What does nation or homeland mean in such a life situation, and how is the inevitable social and moral turbulence – embedded in the migrant’s biography – employed and interpreted by the migrant herself? This book addresses these issues through an imaginative analysis of five life stories as presented by Hungarian women living in Sweden. The author shows that exile stories revolve around rescuing and restoring things from the past, around reinventing the concept of what is left of a home. The stories speak of lives lived internally, in which one’s present becomes radi-cally different from one’s past and in which a former homeland is transformed into either an idealized or a demonized realm. A society’s grand narratives do not necessarily define an individual’s expe-rience of life in exile. Rather, one must listen to what personal narratives say. Katalin Henriksson is a linguist and narrative analyst in Lund, Sweden. She has spent many years exploring the cultural and symbolic universe of Hungarians in Sweden.
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408 kr429 kr
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