BibliOpen logo
Search icon
Cover unavailable
Drift Net: The Aesthetics of Literature and Media in Migration
Drift Net: The Aesthetics of Literature and Media in Migration

by Chris Campanioni

Lever Press, 2025

ISBNs

Paper: 978-1-64315-080-2

eISBN: 978-1-64315-081-9

About the Book
Today’s aesthetic strategies to compose content and identity across digital media are neither new nor exclusively digital, but emerged from migration. In Drift Net: The Aesthetics of Literature and Media in Migration, Chris Campanioni theorizes an aesthetics of transmedia as a framework for civic activism, while showing how migrants have forecasted and reshaped new media practices and norms, producing a political subjectivity that resists subjectification. As borders, global inequality, racism, and xenophobia proliferate, migrants continue to enact the possibilities of something else, beyond being spoken about and spoken for. 

Through a model Campanioni calls a “migratory text,” Drift Net advances a theory of literature and art born in translation that calls into question established theories of world literature, national literatures, literary periodization, and translation itself. Through an analysis of works born in translation and produced in passage, detention, and exile, Campanioni utilizes this model to read creatively across a wide range of social and political formations, from the experience of his parents' exiles to alternative housing initiatives and asylum reform efforts throughout Europe, including the largest LGBT+ refugee center in the world. Drawing on a mixed methodology of qualitative interviews with asylum applicants and shelter directors, textual analysis, and autoethnographic narrative, Drift Net traces literary developments alongside contemporary social and political interventions. This approach proposes interventions on the organizational levels of asylum, integration, public housing, and membership. It also marks the ways migrant creators have reformulated subjectivity through the same genres and modes that have contributed to their devaluation as minoritized subjects. 

Drift Net both deepens and broadens our conceptualization of migrant literature, and recovers an understanding and application of transmedia that predates digital cultures. Campanioni offers a wide-ranging study of texts including Edward Said and Jean Mohr’s After the Last Sky: Palestinian Lives, Edgar Garcia’s Skins of Columbus, Anna Seghers’s Transit, Francis Ponge’s Soap, Walid Raad’s The Atlas Group, Klára Hosnedlová’s embroidered paintings, Reem Karssli and Caroline Williams’s Now is the Time To Say Nothing, Cornelia Schleime’s paper prints, and more. Drift Net formulates the “migratory” as a site of artistic production, resistance, and possibility, where theory is not an end but the beginning of tools and practices that might help researchers, instructors, and organizers to develop their strategies.
About the Author
Chris Campanioni is Lecturer of Creative Writing and Media Studies at Pace University. His work on migration and media theory has been awarded the Calder Prize for interdisciplinary research and a Mellon Foundation fellowship, and his writing has received the Pushcart Prize, International Latino Book Award, and Academy of American Poets College Prize. His essays, poetry, and fiction have been translated into Spanish and Portuguese and have found a home in several venues, including Diacritics, Journal of Cinema and Media Studies, Best American Essays, and Latin American Literature Today.
Reviews
“A remarkable achievement ...Bold, elegantly written, and breath-takingly ambitious, this book is illuminating and vital in a way few contemporary works manage to be. Chris Campanioni frictionlessly weaves links between many different areas and modes of thought for a study that—while theory-laden—reads smoothly, accessibly, and poetically. Grounded in the experiences of real people, Drift Net makes a strong case for peripheral cultural productions like the migratory text as a methodology for understanding, relating to and constructing alternative intersubjectivities that resist global hegemony. The book will be most valued by scholars in the humanities and those interested in better understanding the refugee crisis and how it connects to so much of modern media culture—in often unexpected ways!”— José Alaniz, University of Washington, Seattle and author of Comics of the Anthropocene: Graphic Narrative at the End of Nature

“Beautifully written and boldly interdisciplinary, Drift Net offers a timely and groundbreaking rethinking of the literary that bridges comparative literature, critical refugee studies, queer theory, and media studies. Campanioni illuminates the intersections of literature, migration, and digital media with striking insight and originality—revealing autobiographical storytelling as a form of activism that both precedes and reframes our digital age.”— Kelley Kreitz, Pace University

Tags
Literature, Semiotics & Theory, Aesthetics, Literary Criticism
Open Access Information

Label: The Lever Initiative

License: CC BY-NC-ND