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Stories from a Migrant City Ben Rogaly

Stories from a Migrant City par Ben Rogaly

Stories from a Migrant City Ben Rogaly


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Résumé

Taking a biographical approach, the book explores the causes and consequences of moving or staying put in the context of class inequality and racisms, and looks for commonalities between people often seen as irredeemably divided.

Stories from a Migrant City Résumé

Stories from a Migrant City: Living and Working Together in the Shadow of Brexit Ben Rogaly

This book intervenes in the immigration debate, showing how moving away from a racialized local/ migrant dichotomy can help to unite people on the basis of their common humanity. Drawing on over one hundred stories and eight years of research in a provincial English city, Rogaly asks what that city (and indeed England as a whole) stands for in the Brexit era. Stories from the citys homes and streets, and from its warehouse and food factory workplaces, challenge middle-class condescension towards working-class cultures. They also reveal a non-elite cosmopolitanism, which contrasts with the more familiar association of cosmopolitanism with elites. The book combines critique with resources for hope. It is aimed at general readers as well as students and lecturers in geography, sociology, migration studies and oral history.

Stories from a Migrant City Avis

'Stories from a migrant city is a beautifully written book mapping the consolidation of a complex culture of multi-ethnic working class cosmopolitanism amid the rise of reactionary populisms.
Drawing on a decade of painstaking research on local workplaces and neighbourhoods, Rogaly uncovers the shared histories of mobility and fixity as well as how they continue to be disrupted by class inequalities and racisms. He should be applauded for not only producing an analytically sophisticated book but one which provides us with some of the resources of hope that might one day help to plot a path towards a more open and democratic future for all.'
Professor Satnam Virdee, University of Glasgow

'A powerful, thoughtful and much needed contribution'
Fatima Manji, Correspondent, Channel 4 News

'In the face of the most ugly uses of place as a code for racialised exclusivity, this poignant and necessary book encourages us to think more expansively - of varieties of inclusion and exclusion, of unexpected conviviality and cosmopolitanism from below, of tactics of racial capitalism that set us against each other and spaces of imagination that can bring us together. All in the form of a kind of love-song to... Peterborough.'
Professor Gargi Bhattacharyya, University of East London

'In this extraordinary book Ben Rogaly shows us that we need to rethink who is considered a migrant and who is a local. The urgent lesson contained in these pages is that any step towards challenging the racism that distorts and confines the immigration debate needs to listen out for what is emerging in the ordinary life of cosmopolitanism from the bottom-up.'
Professor Les Back, Goldsmiths, University of London

'Ben Rogaly succeeds in dissolving the distinction between local and migrant to illuminate everyday forms of working-class multicultural interaction and conviviality. A must-read book in an age of Brexit uncertainty, changing global macro-economic processes and the rise of nationalist nostalgia.'
Professor Anoop Nayak, Newcastle University

'This book is for anyone interested in British identity. You dont need to have spent your Saturdays as a teenager hanging around the Queensgate shopping centre to find it informative and compelling. But Rogaly also resists using the city merely as a way to explain something bigger, as a stand-in for other provincial places.
In Stories From a Migrant City, Peterborough exists, in and of itself, as a distinct place. We need more books that do the same for other cities and towns in the United Kingdom and elsewhere in the world.'
Charlotte L. Riley, New Humanist

'Rogalys Stories from a Migrant City challenges contemporary understandings of immigrant inclusion and exclusion and xenophobic antipathy in the aftermath of Brexit. Rogaly (Univ. of Sussex, UK) criticizes common analyses of Brexit as a clash between open-minded, cosmopolitan elites and racist, native-born, working-class whites. Instead, using a politics of place in Peterborough (a small, provincial city outside of London), coupled with illuminating oral history data drawn from "locals," "newcomers," "immigrants," and "elites," he reveals that the politics that put Brexit into play are more complicated than the superficial images presented in the media and in much academic discourse. Rogaly demonstrates that cosmopolitanism is regularly practiced in the everyday lives of Peterboroughs working- and middle-class inhabitants. Late-stage capitalism and neoliberalism have put everything in flux so that the terms "native" and "migrant" do not adequately reflect who lives in Britain and whose "authentic" British lifestyle is at stake from the promises and threats of Brexit. Disruption of continuity of place magnifies changes, making them seem more threatening to the national and local projects. Rogaly provides glimmers of hope highlighting historical moments of opportunities for unity.
--R. A. Harper, York College
Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; professionals.
Reprinted with permission from Choice Reviews. All rights reserved. Copyright by the American Library Association.

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À propos de Ben Rogaly

Ben Rogaly teaches in the Department of Geography at the University of Sussex

Sommaire

1 Introduction: Non-elite cosmopolitanism in the Brexit era
2 Indias my heart, and I know Im an Indian: histories of mobility and fixity
3 If not you, they can get ten different workers in your place: racial capitalism and workplace resistance
4 Were not just guardians of the area but of the whole city: urban citizenship struggles and the racialised outsider
5 And then we just let our creativity take over: cultural production in a provincial city
6 Conclusion: the immigration debate and common anger in dangerous times
Acknowledgements
Bibliography

Informations supplémentaires

GOR012031196
9781526131737
1526131730
Stories from a Migrant City: Living and Working Together in the Shadow of Brexit Ben Rogaly
Occasion - Très bon état
Broché
Manchester University Press
2020-03-13
248
N/A
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