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“From One Shore to the Other”: Other Revolutions in the Interstices of the Revolution
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Swansea University Author: Martina Tazzioli
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DOI (Published version): 10.1111/anti.12379
Abstract
This interview conducted with Imed Soltani and Federica Sossi centres on the struggle of the families of Tunisian missing migrants in the Mediterranean Sea. The campaign, named “From One Shore to the Other: Lives that Matter”, started in 2011 in the aftermath of the outbreak of the Tunisian revoluti...
Published in: | Antipode |
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ISSN: | 00664812 |
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2017
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa37970 |
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2018-03-15T10:20:14.4465987 v2 37970 2018-01-09 “From One Shore to the Other”: Other Revolutions in the Interstices of the Revolution 7d2ba334d687f4834fffbbebaedd3581 0000-0003-0866-7611 Martina Tazzioli Martina Tazzioli true false 2018-01-09 SGE This interview conducted with Imed Soltani and Federica Sossi centres on the struggle of the families of Tunisian missing migrants in the Mediterranean Sea. The campaign, named “From One Shore to the Other: Lives that Matter”, started in 2011 in the aftermath of the outbreak of the Tunisian revolution. Through this campaign, the families of the missing migrants and activists of theItalian feminist collective Le Venticinqueundici demanded at Italian and Tunisian institutions be held accountable for the disappearance of young Tunisian migrants who crossed the Mediterranean to Italy. The unique character of this struggle is that it took place across the two shores of the Mediterranean.. The conversation between Soltani and Sossi illustrates the strengths of the campaign and the difficulties that arose in running it across shores, and offers a theoretical insight into the notion of political recognition in an effort to decolonize the gaze on what counts as political subjectivity and political struggle. Journal Article Antipode 00664812 Mediterranean: missing migrants; feminist; struggle; Tunisia 26 12 2017 2017-12-26 10.1111/anti.12379 COLLEGE NANME Geography COLLEGE CODE SGE Swansea University 2018-03-15T10:20:14.4465987 2018-01-09T14:26:37.0736775 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Geography Martina Tazzioli 0000-0003-0866-7611 1 0037970-15032018101924.pdf 37970.pdf 2018-03-15T10:19:24.6800000 Output 82992 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2019-12-26T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
title |
“From One Shore to the Other”: Other Revolutions in the Interstices of the Revolution |
spellingShingle |
“From One Shore to the Other”: Other Revolutions in the Interstices of the Revolution Martina Tazzioli |
title_short |
“From One Shore to the Other”: Other Revolutions in the Interstices of the Revolution |
title_full |
“From One Shore to the Other”: Other Revolutions in the Interstices of the Revolution |
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“From One Shore to the Other”: Other Revolutions in the Interstices of the Revolution |
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“From One Shore to the Other”: Other Revolutions in the Interstices of the Revolution |
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“From One Shore to the Other”: Other Revolutions in the Interstices of the Revolution |
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Martina Tazzioli |
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This interview conducted with Imed Soltani and Federica Sossi centres on the struggle of the families of Tunisian missing migrants in the Mediterranean Sea. The campaign, named “From One Shore to the Other: Lives that Matter”, started in 2011 in the aftermath of the outbreak of the Tunisian revolution. Through this campaign, the families of the missing migrants and activists of theItalian feminist collective Le Venticinqueundici demanded at Italian and Tunisian institutions be held accountable for the disappearance of young Tunisian migrants who crossed the Mediterranean to Italy. The unique character of this struggle is that it took place across the two shores of the Mediterranean.. The conversation between Soltani and Sossi illustrates the strengths of the campaign and the difficulties that arose in running it across shores, and offers a theoretical insight into the notion of political recognition in an effort to decolonize the gaze on what counts as political subjectivity and political struggle. |
published_date |
2017-12-26T03:47:56Z |
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1763752307522011136 |
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11.017731 |