我们在这里,我们的心在那里":乡村、归属和同行

IF 3.2 2区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY Sociologia Ruralis Pub Date : 2024-06-03 DOI:10.1111/soru.12486
Henna Asikainen, Ruth McAreavey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

农村田园诗的概念在学术界广为人知。与这一想象相联系的是,农村地区由白色和同质空间组成,具有排斥性的社会保守价值观。近几十年来,研究发现移民来到了所谓的新移民目的地,即当代移民经历很少的农村地区,他们往往带来一种世界主义的感觉。这些研究挑战了关于农村空间完全排他性的论述,确定了欢迎和好客的行为。这些行为通常在日常空间中进行,以帮助新移民产生归属感。移民对一个地方的归属感往往被视为他们融入社会的指标。研究表明,归属感不仅仅是一个用来描述对地方的依恋的术语,它还与政治(归属感)和身份概念有关。我们利用地方的特殊性来研究归属感、乡村性和种族之间的交集。通过与不同移民一起沿着英格兰北部哈德良长城(庆祝 1900 周年)进行参与式徒步旅行,我们探讨了徒步旅行作为一种与被迫难民接触的工具的意义。我们从艺术从业者和社会学家的双重视角进行了探讨。该项目包括集体徒步旅行、由创意艺术家主导的学习研讨会(最终形成了一次表演性抗议徒步旅行)以及面向公众的艺术展览。共同行走的行为模糊了因个人身份或地位而产生的界限,通过共同的活动建立了一种纽带,使对话和友谊得以产生。通过集体行走,我们探索了难民和寻求庇护者在乡村空间面临的障碍;我们展示了归属感是如何通过情感和关系产生的。情感联系可以成为生存的有力工具,尤其是在残酷的移民制度下,这种制度泯灭人性,不承认个人的真实身份。本文的标题 "我们在这里,我们的心在那里 "就体现了这一点,该标题来自我们的一位参与者,他在沿着隔离墙进行艺术表演抗议时使用了这句话。
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‘We are here our hearts are there’: Rurality, belonging and walking together
The notion of the rural idyll is well recognised within scholarship. Allied to this imaginary is that rural areas comprise white and homogenous space, with socially conservative values that are exclusionary. In recent decades, studies have identified the arrival of migrants into so‐called New Immigration Destinations, rural spaces with little contemporary experience of immigration, often bringing with them a sense of cosmopolitanism. That research challenges discourses of a fully exclusive rural space, identifying acts of welcoming and hospitality. These acts are often performed in everyday spaces to help create a sense of belonging for new arrivals. Migrants’ sense of belonging to a place is often taken as an indicator of their integration into society. Research has shown that belonging is more than a term used to describe an attachment to place, it also relates to the politics (of belonging) and to notions of identity. We use the specificity of place to examine the intersection of belonging, rurality and ethnicity. Drawing on participatory walks with diverse migrants along Hadrian's Wall in the North of England (celebrating 1900‐year anniversary), we explore the significance of walking as a tool to engage with forced refugees. We do so through the dual perspectives of an art practitioner and a sociologist. The project included collective walks, creative artist lead learning workshops, which lead to a performative protest walk, and a public‐facing art exhibition. The act of walking together blurs boundaries arising from individual status or position, creating a bond from doing a shared activity enabling conversation and friendships to emerge. Through collective walking, we explore the barriers refugees and those in the asylum‐seeking system face in the rural space; and we show how belonging is emotional and relational. Emotional connections can become powerful tools for survival, especially in a cruel immigration system that dehumanises and fails to recognise individuals for who they really are. This is demonstrated in the title of this article ‘We are here our hearts are there’, which comes from one of our participants who deployed the phrase during the artistic performative protest along the Wall.
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来源期刊
Sociologia Ruralis
Sociologia Ruralis Multiple-
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
14.60%
发文量
58
期刊介绍: Sociologia Ruralis reflects the diversity of European social-science research on rural areas and related issues. The complexity and diversity of rural problems require multi and interdisciplinary approaches. Over the past 40 years Sociologia Ruralis has been an international forum for social scientists engaged in a wide variety of disciplines focusing on social, political and cultural aspects of rural development. Sociologia Ruralis covers a wide range of subjects, ranging from farming, natural resources and food systems to rural communities, rural identities and the restructuring of rurality.
期刊最新文献
The cofradías’ role within the Fisheries Local Action Groups system: Implications for small‐scale fisheries in Galicia (Spain) Incentivising public goods delivery in the UK through the lens of Theories of Practice and Theory of Capital ‘We are here our hearts are there’: Rurality, belonging and walking together Relational work in an alternative food network: The fundamental role of shared meaning for organising markets differently Input legitimacy of bottom‐up fishery governance: Lessons from community‐led local development in two Nordic EU countries
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