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Embodied Memory and Bengali Identities in Britain - (Palgrave MacMillan Memory Studies) by Julia Giese (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- This book provides insight into the relationship between embodied processes and products of remembering and belonging among British Bangladeshi women in Tower Hamlets, London.
- About the Author: Julia Giese is a current Research Associate at the Department for Communication and Media Studies at Loughborough University in the UK.
- 203 Pages
- History, Historiography
- Series Name: Palgrave MacMillan Memory Studies
Description
Book Synopsis
This book provides insight into the relationship between embodied processes and products of remembering and belonging among British Bangladeshi women in Tower Hamlets, London. Based on an analysis of memories performed in both professional and social dancing among British Bangladeshi women, as well as of the spaces and encounters that enable the production, transmission, and negotiation of such memories, this book addresses questions about the relationship between remembering and identification in the diaspora.
From the Back Cover
This book provides insight into the relationship between embodied processes and products of remembering and belonging among British Bangladeshi women in Tower Hamlets, London. Based on an analysis of memories performed in both professional and social dancing among British Bangladeshi women, as well as of the spaces and encounters that enable the production, transmission, and negotiation of such memories, this book addresses questions about the relationship between remembering and identification in the diaspora.
Julia Giese is a current research associate at the Department for Communication and Media Studies at Loughborough University in the UK and a lecturer at the Institute for Diversity Research at Georg-August-University in Germany. She is interested in cultural memory, gender and diaspora, media work, and creative research methodologies.
About the Author
Julia Giese is a current Research Associate at the Department for Communication and Media Studies at Loughborough University in the UK. She is interested in cultural memory, gender and diaspora, media work, and creative research methodologies.