From an interpretive, post-structuralist perspective, this paper analyzes the discursive constructions of fluid migrant identities through the lens of narrative practice. I describe the presentations of the Self /the Other which get inscribed in a series of truncated stories mobilized by three unsheltered Ghanaians who lived on a bench in a Catalan town. I explore their self-attributed /other-ascribed social categories and argue that these multifaceted identity acts are a lens into how heterogeneous migrant networks apprehend social exclusion in their host societies. I show that a narrative approach to the interactional processes of migrant identity construction may be revealing of these populations’ social structuration practices, which are ‘internally’ regulated in off-the-radar economies of meaning. I problematize hegemonic conceptions that present migrants as agency-less, decapitalized storied Selves, and suggest that stagnated populations may also be active tellers who act upon companions and rivals, when fighting for transnational survival in contexts of precariousness.
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Cited by (5)
Cited by five other publications
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2021. Narrative. In Migration Practice as Creative Practice, ► pp. 159 ff.
Sabaté i Dalmau, Maria
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Mădroane, Irina Diana
2017. Symbolic (Self-)Identifications of Care Workers in Diasporic Media: Romanian Migrant Women in Italy. Gender Studies 16:1 ► pp. 87 ff.
Sabaté-Dalmau, Maria
2016. Migrant narratives of dis/emplacement: The alternative spatialization and ethnicization of the local urban floor. Text & Talk 36:3
Sabaté-Dalmau, Maria
2018. Undocumented migration, informal economic work and peripheral multilingualism: challenges to neoliberal regimes?. Language and Intercultural Communication 18:4 ► pp. 362 ff.
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