"This is a good introduction to a broad range of topics involving migration, as well as a diving board for deeper discussion. It's best suited for humanities and social sciences scholars, students, and those interested in the research of and application of maps and geography to the titular topics. Mapping Migration, Identity, and Spacewould make a great course reading or textbook, but is also fascinating as a way to brush up on history and the various ways it can be interpreted." (base line, Vol. 40 (3), June, 2019)
1. Introduction: How Does Migration Take Place?
Tabea Alexa Linhard and Timothy H. Parsons
2. Walking to the Northern Mines: Mesoamerican Migration in New Spain
Laurent Corbeil
3. Big History and the Local Response: Migration and Identity in a European Borderland
Jan Musekamp
4. Mapping Museums in New Zealand: The Representation of Place Identity in the Permanent Exhibition at the Puhoi Bohemian Museum
Christopher Sommer
5. Moving Barbed Wire: Geographies of Border Crossing during World War II
Tabea Alexa Linhard
6. Image and Imagination in the Creation of Pakistan
Lucy Chester
7. Jumping Tribal Boundaries: Space, Mobility, and Identity in Kenya
Timothy H. Parsons
8. Movement after Migration: The Cultivation of Transnational Algerian Jewish Networks, 1962-1973
Sara T. Jay
9. Silent Forced Migrations in Twenty-First Century Jerusalem
Meir Margalit
10. Defining Borders on Land and Sea: Italy, the European Union, and Mediterranean Refugees 2011-2015
Djordje Sredanovic
11. B/Ordering Turbulence beyond Europe: Expert Knowledge in the Management of Human Mobility
Maribel Casas Cortés, Sebastián Cobarrubias, and John Pickles
12. The “Right to the City” in the Landscapes of Servitude and Migration, From the Philippines to the Arabian Gulf, and Back
Dalal Alsayer Musaed
13. The Politics of Space and Identity: Making Place in a Suburban District
Linling Gao-Miles
14. Conclusion: A Geographer’s Perspective on Migration, Identity, and Space
Russell King
Tabea Linhard is Professor of Spanish, Comparative Literature, and International Studies at Washington University in St. Louis, USA.
Timothy H. Parsons holds a joint appointment as Professor of African History in the History Department and the African and African American Studies Department at Washington University in St. Louis, USA.
This interdisciplinary collection of essays focuses on the ways in which movements of people across natural, political, and cultural boundaries shape identities that are inexorably linked to the geographical space that individuals on the move cross, inhabit, and leave behind. As conflicts over identities and space continue to erupt on a regular basis, this book reads the relationship between migration, identity, and space from a fresh and innovative perspective.
Tabea Linhard is Professor of Spanish, Comparative Literature, and International Studies at Washington University in St. Louis, USA.
Timothy H. Parsons holds a joint appointment as Professor of African History in the History Department and the African and African American Studies Department at Washington University in St. Louis, USA.