This collection rethinks crisis in relation to critique through the
prism of various declared 'crises' in the Mediterranean: the refugee
crisis, the Eurozone crisis, the Greek debt crisis, the Arab Spring, the
Palestinian question, and others. With contributions from cultural,
literary, film, and migration studies and sociology, this book shifts
attention from Europe to the Mediterranean as a site not only of
intersecting crises, but a breeding ground for new cultures of critique,
visions of futurity, and radical imaginaries shaped through or against
frameworks of crisis. If crisis rhetoric today serves populist,
xenophobic or anti-democratic agendas, can the concept crisis still do
the work of critique or partake in transformative languages by
scholars, artists, and activists? Or should we forge different
vocabularies to understand present realities? This collection explores
alternative mobilizations of crisis and forms of art, cinema,
literature, and cultural practices across the Mediterranean that
disengage from dominant crisis narratives.
Chapter 1 is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution
4.0 International License via link.springer.com.