Migration Outline - University of Brighton
Transcription
Migration Outline - University of Brighton
Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton Outline of Schedule Keynote: Iain Chambers (Naples) 'Mediterranean archives, migrating modernities and lessons from the sea' Panel Presentations: Creative Testimony Anna Cole (Brighton) Dora Carpenter-Latiri (Brighton) & Francesco Bellinzis (Barcelona & Brighton) Jeni Williams (Wales) Fascism Eszter Kiss (Eötvös Loránd) Jelena Timotijevic (Brighton) Kostas Maronitis (Leeds Trinity) Mobility Emma Duester (Goldsmiths) Sibyl Adam (Edinburgh) Nations and migration Annika Bøstein Myhr (Oslo) Cristina Şandru (Independent) Philip Phillis (Glasgow) Sea-crossings Agnes Woolley (Royal Holloway) & Mariangela Palladino (Keele) Federica Mazzara (Westminster) Film Screening Maja Malus (MKC), Balkan Curtains Organised by Liam Connell, Vedrana Velickovic, Jelena Timotijevic and Mark Dunford C21: Centre for Research in Twenty-First Century Writings | Arts & Humanities, University of Brighton Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton Abstracts Keynote Iain Chambers (Naples) 'Mediterranean archives, migrating modernities and lessons from the sea' This talk will seek to wrench the discussion and understanding of contemporary migrations out of the predictable coordinates. It will insist, again prevailing representations, that migration is neither merely a socio-economical phenomenon nor a social ‘problem’ or political ‘emergency’. On the contrary, it will be argued that migration is one of the constitutive processes in the making of modernity, both its Occidental inception and subsequent planetary realisation. As a structural and historical condition, intrinsic to the political economy of the modern world and its violent cartographies, migration will be considered in terms of a cultural, historical and epistemological challenge. In other words, the modern migrant with her history, culture and life actively questions citizenship, national belonging and understandings of the European polity in a manner that invites us to consider their colonial fashioning and postcolonial configurations. Such considerations open up deeper historical temporalities and altogether more extensive and unstable archives than those associated with the homogenous time of national identities. Clearly all of this cuts into and interrogates our very understanding of the present, forcing us to register the limits of a certain European exercise of modernity. I propose to render these considerations more concrete through concentrating on the new centrality that the Mediterranean has recently acquired in the mounting political debate on migration, and from there seek to draw upon other languages – from the political geographies and cultural powers sustained in maritime archives and the economies of sound and music – that might provide us with the means for a diverse critical response. Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton Panel Presentations Creative Testimony Anna Cole (Brighton) ‘“We are all boat people”: Immigrant stories on the borders of Europe’ “The British border is physically today in France, so it’s quite a hypocritical situation. Lots of refugees if they’re from Sudan or Syria, cannot physically go to England to request asylum because the border control is here in France”, (Carolyn Wiggan, volunteer, Jules Ferry refugee centre, Calais). Jules Ferry is France’s first statesanctioned migrant centre, providing one hot meal a day, plus access to showers and phones. Conditions are reportedly worse than in many refugee camps across the world. Earlier in May this year a solidarity group of volunteers from the UK travelled to the camp to provide meals using supplies of donated and unwanted food. “One way to get around the guilt of knowing fellow humans live in squalor is to imagine them as somehow “other” to yourself, uneducated foreigners, bad people or if you believe Katie Hopkins, cockroaches”, says Shanna Jones, who volunteered at the camp. “Sitting around the fire with a group of men, Dennis a mechanic from Southern Sudan gets onto the subject of Mr Bean. We spend the next 15 minutes laughing over Rowan Atkinson’s funniest moments”. Immigrant, post-colonial and activist literature and discourse outside of Europe, such as the: “Australia: resettling boat people since 1788” campaign, has long recognised the social, political, economic and cultural links between Britain and other western ‘metropoles’, and those who seek to enter now, but are barred. In this paper I seek to reconnect stories of contemporary refugees in Europe, from former British and French colonies, to their colonial and postcolonial histories, partly via a reading of Fatou Diome’s The Belly of the Altantic, objects in The Gallery of the Gifts, at Le Musee de L’Histoire de l’Immigration, France’s first museum of immigration and Refugee Tales. What are some of the imaginative geographies and cultural threads that connect refugees from former British and French colonies to their imagined futures? Organised by Liam Connell, Vedrana Velickovic, Jelena Timotijevic and Mark Dunford C21: Centre for Research in Twenty-First Century Writings | Arts & Humanities, University of Brighton Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton Dora Carpenter-Latiri (Brighton) & Francesco Bellinzis (Barcelona/Brighton) ‘Migration narratives and art from the Mediterranean zone today: Representations, identities, resistance' Focusing on selected contemporary novels from the Mediterranean and following a multidisciplinary approach we will analyse passages from Igiaba Scego, an Italian writer originally from Somalia and El Hacmi, a Catalan writer originally from Morocco, and show how these migrant writers transform their experience into the construction of a literary identity that transcends ethnic and cultural boundaries. Referring to Bourdieu’s field and capital theory and to concepts of transnationalism, we will show that these novels are carving an intercultural Mediterranean space transcending borders and overcoming assigned stigmatised identities. We will also present elements of this intercultural/ trans-border Mediterranean space in other narratives of migration in the present and in the recent past as well as in the visual arts. Finally, we will show that these narratives and representations talk back to contest the North/South hierarchy and to rethink the Mediterranean as a diverse and multiple space where the migrant belongs. Jeni Williams (Wales) ‘Framing asylum seekers and refugees: creative writing choices in a context of disbelief, paranoia and malicious rumour’ This paper explores the impact of the context of disbelief, paranoia and malicious rumour within which asylum seekers and refugees find themselves, on their creative writing response. It investigates issues of choice of subject, the problems of writing in an unfamiliar language and being confronted by unspoken assumptions about the nature of writing and its relation to testimony on the one hand and crafted melody on the other with different aesthetic mores; most of all it considers the impact and marketing of narratives that mark the self according to a logic of victimisation on the writers themselves who risk being fixed into that model of self hood, and on the readers who may further marginalise the writers by reading them in those terms. The paper will focus on three sets of Creative Writing workshops with women from countries as diverse as Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, Lebanon, Syria, China and Nigeria. It will conclude by looking more closely at the complex narratives of childhood and loss which haunt their writings through the lens of four poems. An afterword will consider the legacy of these workshops on the creative practice of the author. Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton Fascism Eszter Kiss (Eötvös Loránd) ‘In-and-Out Situation: Media Representation of Immigration and Emigration in Hungary’ Migration is one of the most discussed issues in the European Union. The free flow of labour is a key element in economic development and immigration to Europe could balance the social consequences of the countries with aging populations. In the meanwhile the number of serious conflicts has been increasing in multicultural societies and concerns about the capacity of the welfare state become more and more common. In this situation it is no wonder that the perception of immigration is at least controversial, but Hungary has a very special situation. In fact Hungary does not belong to the most popular destinations of immigrants and refugees, it is rather a transition country. In spite of that the media report about a constant flow of refugees, but actually the number of irregular migrants transiting the borders is much lower than in a lot of countries in the European Union. It has become a common practice to label refugees and immigrants as people who are coming for the social benefits regardless to their actual motivations. It is also a Hungarian phenomenon that only 1,5-2% of the population have foreign citizenship and a great part of them came from the neighbouring countries. In addition the official political rhetoric intentionally encourages xenophobic reactions. At the same time approximately half a million Hungarian people have left the country in the last couple of years. A great part of them, nearly 350,000 people live in the United Kingdom now and there are more who take jobs for only a few months (for example as a shuttling doctor), so London is commonly mentioned as “the fifth largest Hungarian city” by the Hungarian media. On the contrary to the immigration to Hungary this phenomenon is absolutely accepted by the society; what is more, the media display it many times as something to be proud of, as an achievement. In my paper I would like to present this highly controversial Hungarian perception of immigration and emigration (especially to the United Kingdom) by analyzing the mainstream Hungarian media representation of several significant cases in connection to these topics. By using qualitative media-investigation techniques and critical discourse analysis I expect to be able to give an insight to the Hungarian society’s really specific relations and attitudes to the migration in Europe. Organised by Liam Connell, Vedrana Velickovic, Jelena Timotijevic and Mark Dunford C21: Centre for Research in Twenty-First Century Writings | Arts & Humanities, University of Brighton Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton Jelena Timotijevic (Brighton) ‘The role of neoliberal project in the emergent ‘neutral’ immigration discourse’ In 1964, Smethwick, a small town in the UK’s West Midlands constituency, became notorious for a vicious and racist general election campaign. The Conservative MP, Griffiths, was elected on the slogan “[i]f you want a nigger for a neighbour, vote Labour.” Both Griffiths, and later Thatcher, used a similar method of instilling fear and anxiety in the communities over shortages of housing, for which, unsurprisingly, the blame fell on immigrant population. Fifty years on, the political arena that plagues the electoral landscape in the UK is an acute reminder of the racist immigrant rhetoric and scapegoating of migrants. The UK Independence Party’s (UKIP) anti-immigrant discourse and deepening racism are manifested in instilling fear about lack of jobs, poor housing, low wages and an unaccountable political elite away from the real culprits. It threatens to create the political narrative along the lines of those we have seen gain votes in other parts of Europe. However, the so called main-stream parties in the UK repeatedly fail to stand up to the racist tide. To illustrate, in 2013 the government launched a pilot campaign in the form of mobile vans circling six London boroughs telling immigrants to “go home”. The Prime Minister exclaimed that encouraging illegal immigrants to leave voluntarily was “cost-effective” rather than using the resources to arrest them and remove them by force. Using Critical Discourse Analysis as a theoretical framework, and focusing on the complex structures and strategies of news reports and their relations to the social context, this paper will address the consequences of the emergent picture illustrated above. It will examine whether the now overly familiar neoliberal project has saturated overt racist discourse so that all manner of immigration control measures is perceived as a direct response to the socioeconomic situation (and consequently deem the immigration discourse race/gender/religion/class/sexuality-‘neutral’). The paper will illustrate that the dangers of the seemingly neutral ‘new wave’ of immigration narratives pose a serious threat and must be actively challenged. Kostas Maronitis (Leeds Trinity) ‘Immigration and the far Right in Greece: Between Dystopian Declarations and Utopian Imaginations’ Within the context of Dublin II, which holds that asylum seekers to EU countries can be evaluated and adjudicated in the country where they first entered, this paper introduces the term Europia - a term that encapsulates and embodies different theoretical positions regarding the experience of migration and its impact on the European project. Europia shifts the debate from the binary of Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton Eurosceptics and Europhiles to the capacity of immigration to create dystopian and utopian visions. As a term it perceives and addresses the EU as a coherent yet multifaceted political entity and contextualizes migration as a constitutive force for the creation of exclusion regimes as well as a postnational condition. The paper focuses on the violent activities and rhetoric of the Greek far Right party Golden Dawn in direct response to mass immigration and waning sovereignty. Following the theoretical elaborations of Michel Wieviorka and Alain Touraine on the reemergence of the Subject in social theory and politics and the subsequent rejection of instrumentality and integration processes the paper establishes two different articulations of Europe. Whereas new theorisations of the Subject privilege the importance of the individual over social integration and the inherent capacity of the Subject to recognise the Other, Golden Dawn constructs a life project against any notion of integration and formulates a Subject whose existence is predicated on the exclusion of the immigrant. In the first instance Golden Dawn declares the EU and Greece in particular as a dystopia of disappearing national identities, values and racial homogeneity caused by unregulated immigration and transnational governance. In the second instance, Golden Dawn reimagines a utopia where the identity of the Greek subject is determined by racial hierarchies and the principle of blood. Mobility Emma Duester (Goldsmiths) ‘Art and the City: The Effects of Corporeal/Virtual Mobility Patterns on the Social Transformation of “Home”’ Artists produce work and participate in multiple host cities, send artwork home whilst working abroad,and work in transnational communities across space. The core argument in this presentation is that artists’ mobility patterns and mobile methods of practice can open out the understanding of migration. Migration today is commonly misunderstood by the press as a negative process which results in cultural clashes, racial bullying, and as being about unskilled migrants from eastern Europe who live in ‘migrant ghettos’. The primary rationale for this research is to create new and updated awareness of this through the exploration of a community of practice, and the trans-local spaces they create through their mobilities. This exploration of mobility patterns will, ultimately, provide a reconsideration of migration – inclusive of movements that are creative, positive, and which develop the home countries. Rather than migration that is predominantly seen as one-way, permanent, for economic reasons, and as going from east to west (Hesse, 2000; Favell, 2008; Wallace and Palyanitsya, 1995), the circular, short-term mobility of the Organised by Liam Connell, Vedrana Velickovic, Jelena Timotijevic and Mark Dunford C21: Centre for Research in Twenty-First Century Writings | Arts & Humanities, University of Brighton Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton artist community is instead multi-directional and creates trans-local spaces that connect home, host and multiple other cities. This presentation will explore the mobility patterns of the art community from the Baltic cities of Tallinn, Riga and Vilnius. It will assess artists’ movements and subsequent trans-local connections in order to see how these city spaces are no longer closed-off but, instead, how they have increasing and expanding links out of, into, and across their perimeters. Many artists take part in a particular type of shortterm, regular mobility in order to exhibit their work, form contacts, and create collaborations. With new routes being formed rather than re-treading the same route(s), plus, every artist has a different set of connections and trajectories, the home cities have a “global sense of place” (Massey, 1994: 146) and become part of a “transnational network of cities” (Sassen, 2005: 31) across Europe. However, do artists move freely or in controlled, pre-determined routes? This speaks to a ‘politics of mobility’ and a tension between having to move to survive and wanting to move for freedom and inspiration. Is this a mobility of pleasure or necessity? Even within the seemingly free flows of artists and circulations of communications, there are elements of control and restriction in these movements. There are constraints, as artists must be mobile in order to survive within a global art market that is increasingly commercially-attuned and a circuit in itself. Furthermore, the Baltic States only have a recent history (24 years) of having an independent art world and art market, which means they have had little time to develop. Artists also have to work harder to survive because of the barrier of geography – being from peripheral art scenes and being eastern European artists. There are still divisions between east and west Europe, or “complex relations” and a “subtle dialectic of domination” (Zabel, 2013:11/27) from the west that serve as restrictions for eastern European artists. Sibyl Adam (Edinburgh) Walking and the Melancholic Migrant in Leila Aboulela’s The Translator (1999) and Monica Ali’s Brick Lane (2003) In contemporary characterisations of migrants, melancholia as an affective experience is linked to their subjective positioning as outsiders or others. This is situated within a national melancholia, as detailed by Paul Gilroy in his Postcolonial Melancholia, that entails a relationship between disillusionment with multiculturalism including ongoing xenophobic rhetorics and the nation’s failure to come to terms with the history of colonialism. Leila Aboulela’s The Translator (1999) and Monica Ali’s Brick Lane (2003) exemplify the precarious position many migrant subjects encompass within the nation. Drawing on Michel De Certeau’s spatial theorising about walking in the city and Sara Ahmed’s conception of the figure of the ‘melancholic migrant’, this paper will show the ways in which the process of walking Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton in public spaces becomes an affective experience for the protagonists in The Translator and Brick Lane. De Certeau calls the act of walking a series of ‘pedestrian speech acts’ and thus sees walking as a space of enunciation. In these terms, I will consider walking as a way of articulating selfhood and as a way of claiming a physical and imagined space within the nation. In order to consider the positioning of migrant walkers, I will employ Ahmed’s notion of the ‘melancholic migrant’. Ahmed discusses how our social obligation to remember the history of empire as one of happiness is a form of nation building. Therefore, the migrant becomes a sore point by refusing to participate in what Ahmed calls ‘the national game’ because they remind us of the negative aspects of imperialism. Overall, I will discuss the uses of melancholia and walking in the two texts to consider the importance of emotion in narratives of migrants in everyday space. Nations and Migration Annika Bøstein Myhr (Oslo) ‘The Non-Existent Ones: Irregular Immigrants’ Narratives and Norwegian National Identity’ This paper takes as its point of departure the idea of autobiographical studies that suggest that individuals’ sense of a stable self or identity is dependent on their ability to make a coherent narrative from their experiences in the past, and their ideas about the future. For asylum-seekers and irregular immigrants, the past often contains traumatic experiences that are not easily represented in a coherent narrative, and the future is often very uncertain. If mental health is dependent on a stable identity, then how may writing affect the health of irregular immigrants? And how are the lives of irregular immigrants represented in fiction? Are authors of fiction rendering the lives of irregular immigrants in broken narratives, so as to mirror their traumatic life trajectories? And do irregular immigrants and asylum-seekers do the same, or are they actually attempting to paper over inconsistencies in their stories? In order to investigate these questions, I will compare Simon Stranger’s youth novel The Non-Existent Ones (2003) and the autobiographical works of Maria Amelie, Illegally Norwegian (2010) and Thank You (2014). All three works were originally written in Norwegian, and none of them have been translated into English. The Trandum detention centre in Oslo plays an important part in both Stranger’s novel and Amelie’s Thank You – but what is its practical and symbolic function for Norwegian national identity? Norway is one of the principal beneficiaries from global inequality, but is also said to be concealing its sense of welfare guilt by assuming the role of peacekeeper and provider of aid abroad. Fictional and non-fictional stories from the Trandum detention centre challenge Norwegian exceptionalism. Organised by Liam Connell, Vedrana Velickovic, Jelena Timotijevic and Mark Dunford C21: Centre for Research in Twenty-First Century Writings | Arts & Humanities, University of Brighton Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton Here, even the Declaration of Human Rights does not seem to apply. Ultimately, the question my paper addresses is what literature by and about irregular immigrants may tell us about the societies in which these non-citizens live. Cristina Şandru (Independent) ‘Britain’s ‘New Migrants’: A Postcolonial Reading of Postcommunist Texts of Immigration’ My discussion will focus mainly on the distinct but interrelated types of what I have termed ‘overcoded fiction’ – i.e. writings which centre on an ‘absent cause’ that cannot be openly expressed in words, and whose gravitational centre rests on the significant silences and implicit statements that inhabit their visible textual surface. They will be shown to have emerged from earlier forms, modes and tendencies dominant in the literary cultures of the region, which blend seamlessly reportage and fantasy, lyricism and irony, black humour and tradicomedy, the ludic and the dystopian. Yet, I argue, these literary forms were adapted in totalitarian East-Central Europe as distinct imaginative responses to a highly coercive discursive regime. They constitute, I will show, a network of counter-discourses that confront the officially sanctioned norms of socialist realism, but also give political valence to experimental or variously non-realist forms (surrealist, hyper-realist, dystopian, magical realist etc.). It is this tenor of resistance and subversion which most closely aligns them with postcolonial literatures, which similarly seek to deconstruct the language, rhetoric, mental set-up, and symbolic representations underpinning the imperial project. In addition, and again much like postcolonial texts, such narratives unmask the potential of the dominant/ repressive discourse for falsification, what Achille Mbembe calls “the stock of falsehoods and the weight of fantasizing functions without which colonialism [and communism, I would add] as a historical power-system could not have worked”. To paraphrase Mbembe’s conclusion on the role of postcolonial thinking, that “it reveals how what passed for European humanism manifested itself in the colonies as duplicity, double-talk and a travesty of reality” (2008), these ‘overcodes’ texts reveal how the rhetoric of equality, fraternity, and justice at the basis of the communist project in actual fact served to obscure the brutality, oppressiveness and stultifying misery of the political regime it engendered. These can be dystopian or magical realist in character, or, more often than not, mock-comedic and parodic; they testify not only to the desire to memorialize, but also the need to forge meaningful connections with a ‘normality’ that had been forcibly corroded by political suppression of individual liberties and institutionalized censorship. Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton Philip Phillis (Glasgow) ‘Towards an Inclusive Discourse: Reconfiguring the Greek-Albanian border in Eduart’ Angeliki Antoniou's Eduart (2006), portrays the true story of Eduart Bako who fled in 1993 to Greece after the crashing of Albania's communist regime only to return to Albania where he was imprisoned for theft. Following the mass insurrection of 1997, that led to the second wave of Albanian migration and the criminalisation of the Greek-Albanian border, Eduart escaped prison, crossed over to Greece and confessed to the murder of an Athenian man. Eduart's atonement and redemption are fittingly portrayed at the border, the exact meeting point between Greece and Albania, where nationalism has served the function of Fortress Europe to ward off unwanted invaders from its economically unstable neighbouring countries. By following a trajectory of redemption, the film redeems the border from discourses of criminality and converges both sides. By leaving its audience at the interstices of both countries, from where new rationales of meaning and communication can be forged, the film asks for a new definition of a (Greek) national cinema while pontificating a transnational cinema without nationalism and Eurocentrism which reinforce xenophobia. By redeeming a clandestine Albanian migrant from murder, at a time when racist stereotyping weighed heavily on Albanian migrants, Eduart challenges media discourse and, through its reliance on the Albanian language and interstitiality, it emerges on the premise that difference can unsettle national cinema instead of dissolve and become assimilated. I will thus address the film's capacity to undermine essentialisms and assess it in terms of its inclusive understanding of national cinema and migration. Examples from several Greek films that display a more entrenched approach to Albanian migration will further highlight Eduart as a departure point from where we can re imagine Greek and European cinemas as inclusive in times of increasing cross-border movement and growing nationalisms. Sea-crossings Agnes Woolley (Royal Holloway) & Mariangela Palladino (Keele) ‘Salvation, Abandonment and the Bureaucracies of Recognition’ This paper examines trans-Mediterranean migration to Europe through the twin paradigms of salvation and abandonment. Able to confer legal rights of residency on migrants, European countries often employ the rhetoric of salvation; yet migrants are also subject to abandonment by their putative saviours. The journey to Europe and its border spaces are sites of possible death or what Achille Mbembe calls a ‘necropolitcial’ space. This constitutes a political nexus which traps migrants between death and salvation where they become at once rescuable and killable; Organised by Liam Connell, Vedrana Velickovic, Jelena Timotijevic and Mark Dunford C21: Centre for Research in Twenty-First Century Writings | Arts & Humanities, University of Brighton Migra&on & Marginali&es 10 September 2015 University of Brighton both saved and abandoned. This paper examines recent literary and filmic engagements with transMediterranean migrant crossings by focusing on the figure of the harraga, who problematises the dual narrative of salvation and abandonment in interesting, if tragic, ways. Migrants who cross borders by sea are known as harragas, from the Arabic: ḥarrāg, meaning ‘those who burn’; they burn frontiers, but they also burn the documentation pertaining to their past lives. This destruction of the past suggests that harragas’ voyages do not anticipate return; the act of burning their documents before setting out on the journey entails an active renouncement of their former selves, their histories and identities, in both legal and ontological terms. What’s more, conceptualising the border as something that can be burned away suggests an active repudiation of Fortress Europe’s border controls and its bureaucratic mechanisms of identification. Through readings of J. M. Coetzee’s The Childhood of Jesus (2013) and Fernand Melgar’s film The Shelter (2014), we examine the extent to which such instances of burning can be read as acts of agency, which reject the rhetoric of salvation and victimhood often imputed to refugees and undermine European mechanisms of bureaucratic recognition. Federica Mazzara (Westminster) ‘Porto M in Lampedusa: A new way of archiving the memory of migration’ This paper will consider the current migratory passage in the Mediterranean towards Lampedusa with a focus on memorial objects. The arrival of migrants’ boats, often victims of shipwrecks,on the island of Lampedusa has produced a large quantity of ‘debris’, which the locals have stored in improvised ghastly ‘cemeteries’ of boats. Within the island, the local collective Askavusa has played a central role in rescuing whatever they could from the wrecked boats, including private photographs, shoes, pots, religious texts and other personal items that accompany the migrants on their often deadly passage. We do not know if the owners of these objects survived the journey. However, they have come to serve as shared material testimonies to a continuing perilous global transit, which has exposed the inadequacies of European and international policies that continue to illegalize the right of refugees to move and survive. Askavusa has not simply collected the surviving objects. They have created the space Porto M, where the objects are displayed to the public, in order to preserve something tangible from the often traumatic memory of the passage and to bear witness to this historical moment commonly characterized as posing a great threat to the stability of European borders and identity. Porto M is not a traditional museum though. It resists any logic of mummification and exoticism. The objects provide the raw material for a project that deals with recycling and rebirth in artistic works that become the symbol of an ‘aesthetics of subversion’ meant to give a new sense to the migratory experience of these mostly faceless and nameless travellers.