In this book we wish to find a new way of talking about, connecting and
operationalising the third space, narratives, positioning, and
interculturality. Our purpose is to shake established views in what we
consider to be an urgent quest for dealing with prejudice.
We therefore seek to draw attention to the following:
- How Centre structures and large culture boundaries are sources of
prejudice
- How deCentred intercultural threads address prejudice by dissolving
these boundaries
- How, in everyday small culture formation on the go, the cultural and
the intercultural are observable and become indistinguishable
- How agency, personal and grand narratives, discourses, and positioning
become visible in unexpected ways
- How we researchers also bring competing narratives in making sense of
the intercultural
- How third spaces are discordant and uncomfortable places in which all
of us must struggle to achieve interculturality
This book is therefore a journey of discovery with each chapter building
on the previous ones. While throughout there are particular empirical
events (interviews, reconstructed ethnographic accounts and research
diary entries) with their own detailed analyses and insights, they
connect back to discussion in previous chapters.