Security and Hospitality in Literature and Culture

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Absolute Hospitality
asylum seeker experiences
Bend Sinister
Bin Laden Assassination
Bin Laden's Body
Bin Laden’s Body
border securitization
Category=DSBH
Category=JBF
Category=JHB
Category=JP
Category=KNS
Chinese Contemporary Fiction
Contemporary Security Practices
Cosmopolitan
Cosmopolitan Memory
Cosmopolitanism
cross-cultural ethics
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_business-finance-law
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ford Madox Ford's Parade
Ford Madox Ford’s Parade
Haneke's Film
Haneke’s Film
Hospitality
Late Apartheid South Africa
Literary Hospitality
Literature
Mainland UK
Majid's Son
Majid’s Son
Migration
migration studies
Mike Marais
Miranda July
Modernism
NATO Coalition
Personal Future Events
refugee narratives
Reluctant Fundamentalist
Research
risk society theory
securitization and hospitality research
Security
Security Imaginary
Silent Minaret
Surveillance
Thoor Ballylee
Tourism
Transit
Transnational
Unconditional Hospitality
Uninvited Guest
Winterbottom's Film
Winterbottom’s Film
World Literature
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367873516
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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With contributions from an international array of scholars, this volume opens a dialogue between discourses of security and hospitality in modern and contemporary literature and culture. The chapters in the volume span domestic spaces and detention camps, the experience of migration and the phenomena of tourism, interpersonal exchanges and cross-cultural interventions. The volume explores the multifarious ways in which subjects, citizens, communities, and states negotiate the mutual, and potentially exclusive, desires to secure themselves and offer hospitality to others. From the individual’s telephone and data, to the threshold of the family home, to the borders of the nation, sites of securitization confound hospitality’s injunction to openness, gifting, and refuge. In demonstrating an interrelation between ongoing discussions of hospitality and the intensifying attention to security, the book engages with a range of literary, cultural, and geopolitical contexts, drawing on work from other disciplines, including philosophy, political science, and sociology. Further, it defines a new interdisciplinary area of inquiry that resonates with current academic interests in world literature, transnationalism, and cosmopolitanism.

Jeffrey Clapp is a Lecturer in the Department of Literature and Cultural Studies at the Hong Kong Institute of Education. His recent work is available in the journals Textual Practice and Partial Answers.

Emily Ridge is a Lecturer in the Department of Literature and Cultural Studies at the Hong Kong Institute of Education. Her work has been published in Journeys: The International Journal of Travel and Travel Writing, Modernism/Modernity, Textual Practice, and Katherine Mansfield Studies.