Tragedies about the suffering of migrants are not a new phenomenon. So this article quickly turns to texts from classical antiquity by Aeschylus and Euripides. It focuses, however, on poetry written over the last decade. Following the routes taken by asylum seekers from Africa and Asia through such transit points as Lampedusa and across Europe to Calais, it looks at depictions of the suffering associated with travel, disaster, and problematic arrival, and at the interaction in tragic writing between old motifs and conventions (tragedy as understood by Aristotle or Hegel) and current issues and resources. Fresh insights are offered into the work of poets from migrant backgrounds (Warsan Shire, Ribkha Sibhatu) and into a range of modes from l...
Rapid rise of population migration is a defining feature of the 21st century due to the impact of cl...
This paper examines the interplay of ancient myths and 21st century realities in recent Maghrebi lit...
“No one leaves home unless/Home is the mouth of a shark,” read the opening lines of Warsan Shire’s p...
Looking back to the early modern period from the current immigration crisis, this article reads Shak...
A situation of enforced migration in which individuals are compelled to migrate against their own ca...
International audienceThis article focuses on three poets (Salah Faik, Adeeb Kamal Ad-Deen and Ahmat...
The arrival of refugees by boat to Sicily is not, perhaps, significant in numbers, but from a humani...
This article rethinks contemporary approaches to asylum by examining literary accounts of human disp...
The tiny Italian island of Lampedusa in the Mediterranean has become notorious in the early twenty-f...
The name Lampedusa resonates meaning in multiple ways. Located at the outskirts of the European Unio...
The arrival of refugees by boat to Sicily is not, perhaps, significant in numbers, but from a humani...
Michèle Najlis is a Nicaraguan poet associated with the Sandinista Revolution; her 1991 collection ...
Immigrant/Immigration Literature, as a genre, has been around for many decades. SigridLoffler, a dis...
The poem gives a voice to many refugees who died crossing borders and many more asylum seekers who w...
Atlas in Transit is a collection of poems circling around the precarity and resilience of people in ...
Rapid rise of population migration is a defining feature of the 21st century due to the impact of cl...
This paper examines the interplay of ancient myths and 21st century realities in recent Maghrebi lit...
“No one leaves home unless/Home is the mouth of a shark,” read the opening lines of Warsan Shire’s p...
Looking back to the early modern period from the current immigration crisis, this article reads Shak...
A situation of enforced migration in which individuals are compelled to migrate against their own ca...
International audienceThis article focuses on three poets (Salah Faik, Adeeb Kamal Ad-Deen and Ahmat...
The arrival of refugees by boat to Sicily is not, perhaps, significant in numbers, but from a humani...
This article rethinks contemporary approaches to asylum by examining literary accounts of human disp...
The tiny Italian island of Lampedusa in the Mediterranean has become notorious in the early twenty-f...
The name Lampedusa resonates meaning in multiple ways. Located at the outskirts of the European Unio...
The arrival of refugees by boat to Sicily is not, perhaps, significant in numbers, but from a humani...
Michèle Najlis is a Nicaraguan poet associated with the Sandinista Revolution; her 1991 collection ...
Immigrant/Immigration Literature, as a genre, has been around for many decades. SigridLoffler, a dis...
The poem gives a voice to many refugees who died crossing borders and many more asylum seekers who w...
Atlas in Transit is a collection of poems circling around the precarity and resilience of people in ...
Rapid rise of population migration is a defining feature of the 21st century due to the impact of cl...
This paper examines the interplay of ancient myths and 21st century realities in recent Maghrebi lit...
“No one leaves home unless/Home is the mouth of a shark,” read the opening lines of Warsan Shire’s p...