Study name: Discourse and Counter-discourse: A multidisciplinary approach to the study of ' crisis', (im mobility and dis-placement tropes in (counter)narratives around contemporary African-European un-authorised migrations

Project lead: Khaoula Zitouni Sayyah

Project length: 2020– 2024

Project overview 

This PhD dissertation examines contemporary narratives and counter-narratives around (North) African unauthorised migrations to EU-rope by foregrounding the view from the Southern Mediterranean side. Using a critical narrative approach, It particularly analyses the ways Moroccan and Algerian political and media discourses construct unauthorised migrants by focusing on the latter's moments of immobility, displacement and so-called 'crisis'. It also experiments with the aforementioned concepts by looking into the potential of hegemonic discourse to 'immobilise' and dis-place migrants at the margins of representation, turning them into figures in 'crisis'. Then, it confronts these framings to the (counter) narratives produced by migrants themselves like published testimonial accounts, Facebook' hypershort' Stories, and other forms of cultural production like migration literature to explore their potential to subvert hegemonic narratives and mobilise alternative 'histories' around (North) African unauthorised migrations.