Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung
Volume 9, Issue 2, 2008

Transnational refugees: The transformative role of art? (Article)

O'Neill M.*
  • a Loughborough University, United Kingdom

Abstract

This paper focuses upon the transformative role of art and the methodological approach of working with artists to conduct ethnographic research with refugees and asylum seekers. In exploring the space or hyphen between ethnography (sociology) and arts based practice (photos, installations, textual practice) I suggest that the combination of biography/narrative (ethnography) and art (mimesis) becomes a "potential space" for transformative possibilities. More specifically, drawing upon Walter BENJAMIN'S (1992) The Storyteller I will discuss the methodological contribution of combining biography/narrative with art forms (ethno-mimesis) in creating a "potential space", a reflective/safe space for dialogue and narratives to emerge around the themes of transnational identities, home and belonging. The importance of renewing methodologies for the work we do within the area of forced migration, humiliation, "egalization" and human rights (LINDNER, 2006), the role of the arts in processes of social inclusion, and the vital importance for creating spaces for dialogue and performative praxis through participatory methodologies are also discussed. © 2008 FQS.

Author Keywords

Ethnomimesis narrative Biography transnational identities Performative praxis Asylum-migration nexus

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-44949085423&partnerID=40&md5=c40d9fb13d5d4055a34ddd9e459e51b5

ISSN: 14385627
Cited by: 49
Original Language: English