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Book

Transforming Otherness

Book

Transforming Otherness

DOI link for Transforming Otherness

Transforming Otherness book

Transforming Otherness

DOI link for Transforming Otherness

Transforming Otherness book

Edited ByJason Finch, Peter Nynäs
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2011
eBook Published 31 October 2017
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351297448
Pages 256
eBook ISBN 9781351297448
Subjects Behavioral Sciences
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Finch, J., & Nynäs, P. (Eds.). (2011). Transforming Otherness (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351297448

ABSTRACT

Today, people in different situations and contexts face intercultural challenges. These are a result of increasing mobility. Sometimes such challenges are brought about by crisis situations and an international labor market. However, people also come in contact with each other through forms of new technology such as the Internet, and through literature and film. In these multicultural encounters, misunderstandings and sometimes clashes are experienced. This volume presents studies in culture, communication, and language, all of which strive, through a variety of theoretical perspectives, to develop understanding of such challenges and perhaps offer practical solutions.

Encountering otherness may evoke fears, negative attitudes, and a corresponding will to dismiss the otherness in front of us—either consciously or unconsciously. This denial of otherness may also be subtle. Thinking about otherness, as described in this volume, also raises questions about how otherness is represented and mediated and about the possible role of third parties in facilitating communication in such situations. Sometimes a third party can play a crucial role in facilitating the communication process and serve as a channel of communication.

Trust in humanity as a bridge to community requires a subtle balance between representations of self and other. Various problems arise in intercultural mediation, which may be caused by cultural and political differences, and these are sometimes used to validate stereotypical beliefs and images. The editors argue that in both academic and art circles, European perspectives have widely been understood as universal.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

ByJason Finch, Peter Nynäs

chapter 1|25 pages

If Culture is Practice … ? A Practice-Theoretical Perspective on Intercultural Communication and Mediation

ByIben Jensen

chapter 2|18 pages

Transforming Versus Repressing the Self and the Other in Virtual Language Learning and Teaching

ByFred Dervin

chapter 3|22 pages

Simon Harel’s Les passages obligés de l’écriture migrante and the Question of Migrant Literature as Intercultural Mediator in Quebec

BySvante Lindberg

chapter 4|23 pages

A Heart from Jenin: Transformation, Mediation, Vulnerability

ByRuth Illman

chapter 5|23 pages

Moving on Boundary Spaces: Altering Embodied Representations of the Other and the Self

ByHelena Oikarinen-Jabai

chapter 6|19 pages

Meeting the Heathens in Ostrobothnia: Moravian Mission Tales and Myths of West Indian Slavery

ByJoachim Mickwitz

chapter 7|25 pages

The Other Time: Use of the Victorian Past in William Plomer’s Double Lives

ByJason Finch

chapter 8|23 pages

Iterative Mapping of Otherness: A Mapping Discussion of the Transforming Potential of the Other

ByClaus Madsen

chapter 9|19 pages

In the End—Am I a Chicana? Imagining the Communities of the Multi-Genre Anthologies This Bridge Called My Back and this bridge we call home in Dialogue with Susan M. Guerra

ByHannah Lutz

chapter 10|31 pages

Intercultural Competence and False Projections: A Perspective on the Critical Tradition of Intercultural Documentary Film

ByAntony Fredriksson, Peter Nynäs
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