Tales of Transit brings together advances from the fields of
transportation and social history, translation studies and literary
scholarship to cast new light on the great transatlantic migration
movements from the mid-nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth century.
For a long time, these movements have been studied from the perspective
of the sending and receiving societies, while not much research was
devoted to what happens in between. The contributions in this collection
move these in-between places to center stage by focusing attention on
immigrants' liminal experiences on board steamers and in exit ports on
both sides of the Atlantic. Drawing on a variety of archival sources as
well as travel writings, fiction, and memoir literature by first-,
second- and even third-generation immigrants, Tales of Transit
highlights how transatlantic migration during the period 1850-1950 was
seldom a straightforward, one-way movement. The viewpoints represented
in this volume go against the stereotype of the migrants as huddled
masses and shows them actively engaging in complex rituals of engagement
and disengagement.