5 research outputs found
Time after time:Imprisonment, re-entry and enduring temporariness
This chapter aims to address the scant attention that has been paid to time and temporalities in re-entry and re/integration research. Drawing on data from the âDistant VoicesâComing Homeâ project, which used creative methods to explore re/integration after punishmentâwe illustrate and analyse three âtravailsâ of penal time. We use the term travails here to stress the significant, difficult and active work involved in addressing these temporal challenges. Respectively, these travails concern the struggles caused by âde-synchronyâ between time inside and outside of prison and the problems of âre-synchronyâ that it creates; the contestation of âreadinessâ for progression and release; and the problem of living with the paradox of âenduring temporarinessâ. In our conclusion, we argue that tackling these three challenges requires people re-entering society to travel not just through spaces and to places but also through time, both backwards and forwards. These journeys are fraught with both difficulty and danger
Echolocations: Exploring integration and the ethics of participation through collaborative songwriting
Abstract not currently available
We are the Sun: Multilingual collaborative songwriting as a hospitable, embodied and political process
Multilingual approaches to collaborative creativity can be seen as one form of resistance to inequality and neo-colonialism, through the potential to decentre the English language, unsettle entrenched linguistic hierarchies, and open up spaces of linguistic hospitality (Ricoeur, 2006). This article will share a song written in collaboration with displaced young people, in order to reflect on ways in which multilingualism in creative processes and performance might play a role in fostering solidarity and mutual care. The song, the writing process and the participants' reflections together act as a lens through which to observe small but significant shifts that can happen when linguistic repertoires beyond the dominant language are welcomed into a shared creative space. Multilingual approaches here are not seen as a quick-fix solution to systemic injustice, but as one way to illuminate questions of power and audibility in socially-engaged arts practice
Crafting Convivial Cultures
This conversation took place as part of the launch event of the âConviviality and Contaminationâ project on 28 September 2022, at Malmö University, with guests Teta Diana and Laura Balboa, moderated by Lucy Cathcart FrödĂ©n. The conversation has been edited for length and clarity