TY - BOOK AU - Sievers,Wiebke ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Cultural Change in Post-Migrant Societies: Re-Imagining Communities Through Arts and Cultural Activities T2 - IMISCOE Research Series, SN - 9783031399008 AV - JV6001-9480 U1 - 304.8 23 PY - 2024/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Springer KW - Emigration and immigration KW - Culture KW - Study and teaching KW - Social aspects KW - Human Migration KW - Cultural Studies KW - Sociology of Migration N1 - Part I: How to conceive change: Theoretical and methodological considerations -- Chapter 1. Post-migrant literary history: a new theoretical and methodological approach -- Chapter 2. Continuity or change? How migrants’ musical activities (do not) affect symbolic boundaries -- Chapter 3. How to research ‘cultural change’ in migration societies? Conceptual and methodological issues -- Chapter. Culture changes but cultural institutions not? -- Part II: Cultural encounters: locations of change and their impact beyond the local -- Chapter 5. Challenging Italian national identity through literature and cinema. Voices and gazes of racialised artists -- Chapter 6. How do ‘migrant’ and ‘world’ music change local and national cultures? An insight from Cologne carnival, related antiracist networks and recent cultural politics -- Chapter 7. Words matter. Museums remove offensive terms in the Netherlands: changing representations of ‘self’ and ‘others’ -- Chapter 8. Everyday encounters with national day celebrations: the case of Turks in Norway -- Part III: Research, arts and cultural production: joint ventures for change -- Chapter 9. Collaborations between arts, academia and activists on topics of migration -- Chapter 10. Refugees in a multimedia dialogue – a methodology that creates new narratives in a process of change -- Chapter 11. Beyond the spectacle of diversity: On art, audience engagement and social inclusion -- Chapter 12. Youth in the city: fostering transcultural leadership for social change; Open Access N2 - This open access book links the artistic and cultural turn in migration studies to the larger struggle for narrative and cultural change in European migration societies. It proposes theoretical and methodological approaches that highlight how ideas of change expressed in artistic and cultural practices spread and lead to wider cultural change. The book also looks at the slow processes of change in large cultural institutions that emerged at a time when culture was nationalised. It explains how individual and group activities can have an impact beyond their immediate surroundings. Finally, the book discusses how migration researchers have cooperated with arts and cultural producers and used artistic means to increase the effect of their research in the wider public. As such, the book provides a great resource for graduate students and researchers in the social sciences and the humanities who have an interest in migration studies and want to move beyond interpreting the world towards changing it UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-39900-8 ER -