Genres of Departure: Forced Migrants’ Family Separation and Personal Narratives

Pub Date : 2021-09-03 DOI:10.33134/njmr.372
Johanna Hiitola, Valtteri Vähä-Savo
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The absence of family members is often inseparable from the phenomenon of forced migration. This article examines how forced migrants make experiences of family separation bearable and meaningful through personal narratives. Following narrative theory and methodology, we understand that people organise their experiences and memories of past incidents predominantly in the form of stories. Narratives also play a crucial role in managing emotions. Earlier literature emphasises that there is no uniform refugee experience or story, but telling a story may help in reconstructing identities and coping with losses. Our data set consists of interviews with 55 forced migrants living in Finland who have experienced family separation. Our narrative analysis reveals that forced migrants make sense of their lives by telling three types of stories: fractured tragedies, salvation narratives and absurd stories. These genres provide different ways of presenting one’s experiences and oneself as an actor. At the same time, each genre limits what can be considered appropriate within a given story. As our study shows, forced migrants may use different types of narratives very creatively to make their hardships more manageable. And stories may enable breaking free from oppressions.
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离开的类型:被迫移民的家庭分离与个人叙事
家庭成员的缺席往往与强迫移徙现象密不可分。本文探讨了被迫移民如何通过个人叙事使家庭分离的经历变得可以忍受和有意义。根据叙事理论和方法,我们理解人们主要以故事的形式组织他们对过去事件的经历和记忆。叙事在管理情绪方面也起着至关重要的作用。早期的文献强调,没有统一的难民经历或故事,但讲述一个故事可能有助于重建身份和应对损失。我们的数据集包括对55名生活在芬兰的被迫移民的采访,他们经历了家庭分离。我们的叙事分析表明,被迫移民通过讲述三种类型的故事来理解他们的生活:破碎的悲剧、救赎的故事和荒谬的故事。这些类型提供了不同的方式来呈现一个人作为演员的经历和自己。同时,每一种类型都限制了在给定的故事中可以认为合适的内容。正如我们的研究所表明的那样,被迫移民可能会非常创造性地使用不同类型的叙事,使他们的苦难更容易控制。故事可以使人摆脱压迫。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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