
Undocumented Storytellers Offers A Critical Exploration Of The Ways Undocumented Immigrant Activists Harness The Power Of Storytelling To Mitigate The Fear And Uncertainty Of Life Without Legal Status And To Advocate For Immigration Reform. Sarah C. Bishop Chronicles The Ways Young People Uncover Their Lack Of Legal Status Experientially -- Through Interactions With Parents, In Attempts To Pursue Rites Of Passage Reserved For Citizens, And As Audiences Of Political And Popular Media. She Provides Both Theoretical And Pragmatic Contextualization As Activist Narrators Recount The Experiences That Influenced Their Decisions To Cultivate Public Voices. Bishop Draws From A Mixed Methodology Of In-depth Interviews With Undocumented Immigrants From Eighteen Unique Nations Of Origin, Critical-rhetorical Ethnographies Of Immigrant Rights Events And Protests, And Narrative Analysis Of Immigrant-produced Digital Media To Interrogate The Power And Limitations Of Narrative Activism. Autobiographical Immigrant Storytelling Refutes Mainstream Discourse On Immigration And Reveals The Determination Of Individuals Who Elsewhere Have Been Vilified By Stereotype And Presupposition. Offering An Unparalleled View Into The Ways Immigrants' Stories Appear Online, Bishop Illuminates Digital Narrative Strategies By Detailing How Undocumented Storytellers Reframe Their Messages When Stories Have Unintended Consequences. The Resulting Work Provides Broad Insights Into The Role Of Strategic Framing And Autobiographical Story-sharing In Advocacy And Social Movements.
This book investigates how undocumented immigrant activists utilize personal storytelling as a strategic tool to navigate legal precarity and advocate for systemic immigration reform. Sarah C. Bishop, a scholar in communication and media studies, synthesizes qualitative data to examine the intersection of personal narrative and political activism. She argues that by reframing their lived experiences, these individuals challenge mainstream media stereotypes and exert agency within a restrictive political climate.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of communication and sociology recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of narrative activism and digital media. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous theoretical foundation for understanding how marginalized groups reclaim their public identity.
Page Count:
224
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190917172
ISBN-13:
9780190917173
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