Asylum, Voice and Testimony
Georgina Colby is Reader in Modern and Contemporary Literature at the University of Westminster. Her research addresses the politics of avant-garde writing and aesthetic space in contemporary socio-political climates, in particular the relation between avant-garde poetics, activisms, and social justice. As PI she led the Feminist Representations: Asylum, Voice, and Testimony project (2018-2022), funded by the British Academy/Leverhulme Trust. Her publications include Kathy Acker: Writing the Impossible (Edinburgh University Press, 2016), and, as editor, Her Silver-Tongued Companion Reading: Reading Poems by Harryette Mullen (Edinburgh University Press, 2023) Reading Experimental Writing (Edinburgh University Press, 2019), The Contemporary Small Press: Making Publishing Visible (Palgrave, 2020), and Death and the Contemporary (a special issue of New Formations, Lawrence and Wishart, 2012). Her articles have appeared in journals such as Contemporary Literature, New Formations, Textual Practice, Journal of Narrative Theory, Women: A Cultural Review, and Comparative Critical Studies. She is the Series Editor of Edinburgh Critical Studies in Avant-Garde Writing and Edinburgh Foundations in Avant-Garde Writing (Edinburgh University Press). Jane Freedman is Professor at the Université Paris 8, France and member of the Paris Centre for Sociological and Political Research (CRESPPA). Her research focuses on an intersectional approach to asylum and migration, with particular regard to the production of gendered forms of violence by migration regimes. She was PI on a seven country study on gender-based violence in the context of migration (https://gbvmigration.cnrs.fr) funded by the EU's GenderNet Plus, and is currently leading and ERC project entitled Growing Up Across Borders (GRABS), focusing on the experiences of young people in situations of forced migration and mobility across borders (https://erc-grabs.univ-paris8.fr). Recent publications include: Gender-Based Violence in Migration: Interdisciplinary, Feminist and Intersectional Approaches (Palgrave, 2022) and The Gender of Borders: Embodied Narratives of Migration, Violence and Agency (Routledge, 2023).