Challenging the commonplace that suspends migrants between two worlds',
this study turns a refreshingly curious eye to complex cultural
relations and literary novelties wrought by Turkish migration to
Germany. At interpretive and historic crossroads involving dialogue and
storytelling, genocide and taboo, and capital and labour in the 1990s.
This book illuminates far-reaching imaginative effects that literatures
of migration can engender. In critical conversation with Arjun
Appadurai, Seyla Benhabib, Homi Bhabha, Rey Chow, Andreas Huyssen,
Dominick LaCapra, Doris Sommer, and many others, Adelson probes history
and aesthetics as surprisingly twinned indices of national and global
transformation at the millennial turn.