Nowhere to Call Home

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterCommunication

Standard

Nowhere to Call Home. / Brox, Trine; Ford, Jocelyn.

Hjem: Tværkultur. ed. / Ehab Galal; Birgitte Schepelern Johansen. Vol. 8 København : Institut for Tværkulturelle og Regionale Studier, Københavns Universitet, 2018. p. 90-101 (Tværkultur).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterCommunication

Harvard

Brox, T & Ford, J 2018, Nowhere to Call Home. in E Galal & BS Johansen (eds), Hjem: Tværkultur. vol. 8, Institut for Tværkulturelle og Regionale Studier, Københavns Universitet, København, Tværkultur, pp. 90-101. <https://curis.ku.dk/admin/files/200333510/BROX_FORD_2018_Nowhere_to_call_home.pdf>

APA

Brox, T., & Ford, J. (2018). Nowhere to Call Home. In E. Galal, & B. S. Johansen (Eds.), Hjem: Tværkultur (Vol. 8, pp. 90-101). Institut for Tværkulturelle og Regionale Studier, Københavns Universitet. Tværkultur https://curis.ku.dk/admin/files/200333510/BROX_FORD_2018_Nowhere_to_call_home.pdf

Vancouver

Brox T, Ford J. Nowhere to Call Home. In Galal E, Johansen BS, editors, Hjem: Tværkultur. Vol. 8. København: Institut for Tværkulturelle og Regionale Studier, Københavns Universitet. 2018. p. 90-101. (Tværkultur).

Author

Brox, Trine ; Ford, Jocelyn. / Nowhere to Call Home. Hjem: Tværkultur. editor / Ehab Galal ; Birgitte Schepelern Johansen. Vol. 8 København : Institut for Tværkulturelle og Regionale Studier, Københavns Universitet, 2018. pp. 90-101 (Tværkultur).

Bibtex

@inbook{c098acb76fc4472eb40e117a06f6afc9,
title = "Nowhere to Call Home",
abstract = "Zanta left her remote Tibetan village in Sichuan Province with her son to seek better opportunities in the Chinese capital. She found, however, that she was marginalized both where she was “supposed to” belong, in rural Tibet as well as in urban Beijing, where she was seeking a school education for her you...ng son. She had nowhere to call home. This conversation explores migration and belonging in this era of mobility, dislocation and globalization. This article is the result of the collaboration between a Norwegian university professor, Trine Brox, and an American journalist and documentary filmmaker, Jocelyn Ford. We met in the United States in 2014, brought together by our mutual research interest in the little-studied phenomenon of Tibetan migration to eastern China. In 2017, we met again for the screening of Jocelyn{\textquoteright}s documentary about Zanta at the Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, where Trine works.",
author = "Trine Brox and Jocelyn Ford",
year = "2018",
language = "Dansk",
volume = "8",
series = "Tv{\ae}rkultur",
publisher = "Institut for Tv{\ae}rkulturelle og Regionale Studier, K{\o}benhavns Universitet",
pages = "90--101",
editor = "Ehab Galal and Johansen, {Birgitte Schepelern}",
booktitle = "Hjem",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Nowhere to Call Home

AU - Brox, Trine

AU - Ford, Jocelyn

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Zanta left her remote Tibetan village in Sichuan Province with her son to seek better opportunities in the Chinese capital. She found, however, that she was marginalized both where she was “supposed to” belong, in rural Tibet as well as in urban Beijing, where she was seeking a school education for her you...ng son. She had nowhere to call home. This conversation explores migration and belonging in this era of mobility, dislocation and globalization. This article is the result of the collaboration between a Norwegian university professor, Trine Brox, and an American journalist and documentary filmmaker, Jocelyn Ford. We met in the United States in 2014, brought together by our mutual research interest in the little-studied phenomenon of Tibetan migration to eastern China. In 2017, we met again for the screening of Jocelyn’s documentary about Zanta at the Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, where Trine works.

AB - Zanta left her remote Tibetan village in Sichuan Province with her son to seek better opportunities in the Chinese capital. She found, however, that she was marginalized both where she was “supposed to” belong, in rural Tibet as well as in urban Beijing, where she was seeking a school education for her you...ng son. She had nowhere to call home. This conversation explores migration and belonging in this era of mobility, dislocation and globalization. This article is the result of the collaboration between a Norwegian university professor, Trine Brox, and an American journalist and documentary filmmaker, Jocelyn Ford. We met in the United States in 2014, brought together by our mutual research interest in the little-studied phenomenon of Tibetan migration to eastern China. In 2017, we met again for the screening of Jocelyn’s documentary about Zanta at the Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, where Trine works.

M3 - Bidrag til bog/antologi

VL - 8

T3 - Tværkultur

SP - 90

EP - 101

BT - Hjem

A2 - Galal, Ehab

A2 - Johansen, Birgitte Schepelern

PB - Institut for Tværkulturelle og Regionale Studier, Københavns Universitet

CY - København

ER -

ID: 200333508