Cosmopolitan minds: Literature, emotion, and the transnational imagination (original) (raw)
Transnational Social Review, 2015
Abstract
it along towards a politics of solidarity, social justice, and transformative social change. As the authors in this chapter have acknowledged, “frameworks for human rights – for women, for migrants, and for all persons – are not self-enforcing” and “historical social relations between nation-states, economic and political agendas, and rigidity in administration make this collaboration ineffective” (p. 382). Therefore, the conversation needs to shift away from a rights discourse within systems of domination and oppression to envision more socially just alternatives.
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