McSweeney's 52, In their faces a landmark : stories of movement and displacement 52, In their faces a landmark : stories of movement and displacement /

Book - 2018

"There is a genre called migrant literature. It covers works by immigrant writers, often about the immigrant experience. Among its chief concerns or themes are displacement, movement, belonging, homecoming, departure, arrival, assimilation, bilingualism, and so on. I suppose we can fairly assume this collection of stories by immigrant writers belongs to that tradition. As immigrant writers, creative spirits caught between worlds whose boundaries are ever shifting, often resulting in more displacement and migration, it is comforting to know there exists a coterie to which belonging is conceivable."--Page 5.

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Location Call Number   Status
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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Published
San Francisco, California : McSweeney's Quarterly Concern [2018]
Language
English
Corporate Author
McSweeney's (Firm)
Corporate Author
McSweeney's (Firm) (-)
Other Authors
Maria Kuznetsova (author)
Item Description
Cover title.
Physical Description
305 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781944211578
  • Editor's note / Nyuol Lueth Tong
  • I pledge allegiance to the butterfly / Maria Kuznetsova
  • Mrs. Kategaya's curse / Casallina Kisakye
  • The anatomy of exile / Zeeva Bukai
  • My mountain is taller than all the living trees / Eskor David Johnson
  • Five petals proud / Aya Osuga A.
  • The wall / Meron Hadero
  • At the edge of Omaha / José Antonio Rodriguez
  • Cappuccino please / Edvin Subašić
  • Hennessy and red lights / Marcus Burke
  • The cobbler and the acolyte / Ilan Mochari
  • Auntie Shirin / Sanam Mahloudji
  • The four humors / Mina Seçkin
  • Chinese girls don't have fairy tales / Rita Chang-Eppig
  • Brandon / Noel Alumit
  • When God was a tree with a glass eye in the middle / Mgbechi Ugonna Erondu
  • Once a cellist / William Pei Shih
  • Many scattered a bench along the banks of Coralville Lake / Novuyo Rosa Tshuma.

Editor's Note by Nyuol Lueth TongThere is a genre called migrant literature. It covers works by immigrant writers, often about the immigrant experience. Among its chief concerns or themes are displacement, movement, belonging, homecoming, departure, arrival, assimilation, bilingualism, and so on. I suppose we can fairly assume this collection of stories by immigrant writers belongs to that tradition. As immigrant writers, creative spirits caught between worlds whose boundaries are ever shifting, often resulting in more displacement and migration, it is comforting to know there exists a coterie to which belonging is conceivable. That said, we should embrace this veritable genre with caution, for despite its liberating possibilities, it also preserves the very logic of our exclusion, namely our "foreignness," our "otherness," often deployed as a mark of inferiority, marginality, and disposability. In other words, it relegates our works to the periphery of provincialism, outside the so-called canon of world literature. Migrant literature is not only a constitutive part of global literature but also arguably its most vital, exciting, innovative element, concerned as it is with exploring themes and questions that are universal and timeless, yet urgent and humane. All the pieces in this issue exhibit this irreducible quality. Excerpted from McSweeney's Issue 52: Immigrant and Refugee Fiction by Dave Eggers All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.