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Postmigrant Experiences to Storytelling 2025 : From Experiences to Storytelling of Postmigration. Reinventing the Narratives of the Self and the World in Pluralistic European Societies

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Link: https://sites.uclouvain.be/narramuse/en/upcoming-events/
 
When Sep 17, 2025 - Sep 19, 2025
Where Louvain-la-Neuve
Submission Deadline Apr 30, 2025
Categories    postmigration   comparative literature   sociology   postcolonial studies
 

Call For Papers

Developed and promoted by the German-speaking academic community, frequently
mobilized by Anglophone and Scandinavian scholars, yet less used in Francophone and
Italophone research, the concept of postmigration marks a significant shift in migration
discourses. By dissolving the binary opposition between migrants and non-migrants, it allows
immigration to be regarded as an intrinsic component of European societies. The conference
“From Experiences to Storytelling of Postmigration” aligns with this ongoing epistemological
and analytical transformation. It aims to explore how postmigration thinking is reshaping the
narratives that can be written, spoken, or reconstructed from migration-related experiences. The
conference will examine the stances, strategies, frameworks, and narrative content which
emerge from the challenges, negotiations, conflicts, and alliances arising within European
societies facing the diversity implied by migration.
Recognizing the diverse interpretations of postmigration, the conference deliberately
embraces the term in its broadest sense. It invites exploration of the narratives of postmigrant
individuals—descendants of immigrants who have not directly experienced migration. It also
encourages the study of narratives about postmigrant societies, understood as societies
transformed by immigration. Finally, the conference offers a space for considering a
postmigrant perspective on storytelling as a practice reshaped by the dynamics of migration.
Resolutely pluralistic, the conference seeks to foster dialogues across the arts and
disciplines which, in various ways, aim to express or give voice to the traces and stories left by
migration within contemporary European societies. Designed with a comparative approach, it
also promotes the exchange of studies on postmigration narratives across different European
cultural and linguistic contexts (Germany, Belgium, France, Italy, Spain, Scandinavia, the
United Kingdom, and more).
Drawing on a range of disciplines, arts, and cultures, the papers will explore postmigrant
narratives of the self and the world. These narratives will be examined through various
dimensions of individual and collective experience likely to result in a form of storytelling. Key
themes such as identity, hybridity, trauma, and struggle will guide the exploration of the
narratives of the self. Concepts like connected history, memory, and postmemory could be
employed to narrate the postmigrant relationship with time. The postmigrant connection to
space will be approached through narratives of private and public spaces that bear the marks of
migration. Special attention will also be given to the religious dimension, understood as a factor
which shapes both the relationship to the self and to the world. Beyond these indicative themes,
many other dimensions of postmigrant experience may also be considered.
While a broad spectrum of narratives can be covered from various perspectives, proposals
should focus on one of the following themes.
1) Literary Narratives of Postmigration. This theme will examine the forms and content
that characterize postmigration narratives, ranging from traditional genres (novel, autofiction,
autobiography, etc.) to more recent forms (rap, slam, podcast, etc.). The objective is to explore
the thematic, semiotic, pragmatic, linguistic, and narrative strategies employed by each genre
to recount and interrogate the experiences of postmigrant individuals and societies. Literary
narratives can also be addressed as laboratories for the imagination, offering spaces to
experiment with new configurations of identity, memory, and space—elements still to beactively (re)constructed in today’s pluralistic societies. Finally, literary works can be studied as
tools of recognition, giving a voice to those often marginalized, and contributing to the creation
of a new imagined community.
2) Visual Narratives of Postmigration. This theme will focus on artistic, cultural, and
media productions which place the image at the heart of postmigration narratives (such as
cinema, documentary, photography, etc.). The aim is to explore how visual media provide
unique resources for representing and conveying the individual and collective experiences
reshaped by immigration. It will also be possible to analyze the techniques—such as
composition and editing—applied to make the image tell the stories of postmigrant individuals
and societies in Europe. Particular attention will be given to narratives that reveal the traces of
migration within urban spaces, as public places often silently bear witness to the history of
immigration to Europe.
3) Postmigrant Narratives in Social Science Fieldwork. This theme will focus on the
methods of inquiry employed in anthropology and sociology to enable immigrant populations
and their descendants to tell their own stories from a “demigrantized” perspective. It will
explore the forms of narrative that allow for the experience of interviewees to be understood as
an integral part of European societies. Special attention will be given to scholarly narratives
that, grounded in real-life trajectories, redefine European histories and identities by
incorporating cultural references, such as Islam, into a pluralistic framework where they are no
longer considered foreign.
4) Historical Narratives of Postmigration. This theme aims to analyze and demonstrate
how postmigration can generate a counter-discourse to dominant national histories. Drawing
on Duncan S.A. Bell’s concept of the “mythscape” (2003), it will examine the conditions under
which transnational and connected historiographies are written and received so as to offer an
account of the formation and evolution of postmigrant European societies, challenging
conventional narratives and highlighting the diverse histories that shape contemporary Europe.
5) Postmigrant Narratives and Education. This theme will explore how narrative can
address the pedagogical challenges of multiculturalism in classrooms within postmigrant
European societies. It will also examine innovative educational practices and strategies that
enable students to share personal stories deeply connected to immigration, and the diversity of
cultural and religious heritages.
6) Postmigrant Narratives and Commitment. This theme will examine how storytelling
functions as a form of engagement with the diversity of cultural and religious heritages. More
specifically, it will explore whether individuals, in asserting their unique perspectives through
narrative, draw upon specific aspects of personal or collective experience—such as personal
development, issues related to the body, or political stances. Additionally, the theme will
investigate how stories reflect the commitment of their authors, as well as the values underlying
this commitment, which are often embedded in the narrative itself.
7) Postmigrant Narratives and Reception. This theme will explore how postmigration
narratives actively shape their own reception. In particular, it will examine how these narratives
engage with the audience’s expectations, often playing with stereotypes and genre conventions.
The focus will also extend to how the narrative, as a communicative act, is crafted to convey a
message that takes into account the pluralistic context in which it is shared. Lastly, the theme
will consider the image of the audience constructed by the narrative, and, in relation to the
previous theme, explore the type of commitment the narrative seeks to inspire in its implicit
audience.
The conference will be held at Université catholique de Louvain (Louvain-la-Neuve,
Belgium), from September 17 to 19, 2025.Papers may be presented in English, French, German or Italian. Proposals, including a
title, an abstract (approximately 300 words) and a brief bio-bibliographical note, should be sent
to Amaury Dehoux (amaury.dehoux@uclouvain.be), Hubert Roland
(hubert.roland@uclouvain.be) and Letizia Sassi (letizia.sassi@uclouvain.be) before April 30,
2025.
We also welcome panel proposals. The organizer is asked to send the title and program
of the panel, including an abstract for each paper (approximately 300 words), and a brief biobibliographical note for each speaker. Proposals should also be sent to Amaury Dehoux
(amaury.dehoux@uclouvain.be), Hubert Roland (hubert.roland@uclouvain.be) and Letizia
Sassi (letizia.sassi@uclouvain.be) before April 30, 2025.
All submitters will be notified of the outcome of their proposal by May 15, 2025 at the
latest

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