Niclas Johansson

The Border-Transgressing Self: Narrative and Cultural Identity in Autofictions of Migration

This project aims to investigate how narrative identity is constructed in autofictions of migration. As migration has become an increasingly widespread phenomenon in a globalized world, we have also seen a growing number of literary representations of experiences of migration, in what is sometimes referred to as "migration literature". A recurring question in these representations of movement between different cultural contexts regards personal identity. This applies in particular to autofictional migration literature, which mixes fiction and autobiography.

The project is based on two different theories that shed light on different aspects of what it means to have an identity. One argues that the individual understands herself through stories and that the answer to the question "who am I?" takes the form of a story that clarifies how the different aspects and stages of one’s life are connected in a meaningful way. The other regards identity in terms of belonging to a certain context or community, which provides a meaningful framework for one's existence. The questions asked in this research project are about how these two types of identity interact: Can the narrative create context and meaning for an individual across cultural boundaries? And to what extent do different cultures carry different possibilities to provide a narrative context for one's identity?
Grant administrator
Mälardalen University, Eskilstuna
Reference number
P22-0431
Amount
SEK 2,468,000
Funding
RJ Projects
Subject
General Literature Studies
Year
2022