Migration and European History's Global Turn

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2025
Host editors
  • D. Motadel
Book title Globalizing Europe
Book subtitle A History
ISBN
  • 9781009262897
  • 9781009262880
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9781009262873
Chapter 10
Pages (from-to) 138-158
Number of pages 21
Publisher Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School of Historical Studies (ASH)
Abstract
Benefitting from a wealth of pathbreaking scholarship that often focuses on macro-level histories, this chapter advocates zooming in on individual interpretations and experiences. By doing so, it argues, historians can open up nuanced perspectives that risk becoming submerged in studies where, rather paradoxically, actual migrants are displaced by an emphasis on overarching migration phenomena. Taking the late modern era as its focus, it traces the global dimensions of two lives spanning almost two centuries to open out broader questions, not least about race and ethnicity. Jacob Riis (1849–1914) and Gérald Bloncourt (1926–2018) were both leading documentary photographers who shared a deep commitment to social reform and the amelioration of working-class conditions. Each recorded migration histories on camera and in writing, thereby enabling an analysis of multimedia representations emanating from the same source. That both were of migration backgrounds themselves – Riis having moved from Denmark to the United States and Bloncourt from Haiti to France – renders the images and texts they created particularly resonant. Their own origins and mobile lives proved crucial to their interpretations of the wider flows of people that have connected Europe with different global settings – and continue to do so today.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Related publication Migration and European History's Global Turn
Published at https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009262873.010
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