Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Ethnic enclave or transcultural edge? Reassessing the Prato district through digital mapping

View through CrossRef
Relations between Italy and other countries – such as China – are often imagined within a binary frame that essentialises national and ethnic communities and fails to recognise the complex transcultural ramifications of an increasingly globalising world. This is particularly problematic when studying those social and cultural spaces that Ilaria Vanni (2016) has described as transcultural edges. These are marginal spaces of transition and encounters between different cultures and societies, which have the potential to create new, innovative and productive ecosystems. We argue that one such space is Prato, an industrial town near Florence, well known for its textile district, and host to one of the largest Chinese communities in Europe. Significant academic attention has been devoted to the Chinese community in Prato, including studies of its social and economic impact on the host local community and the textile industry. Most of these studies tend to isolate the Chinese community from the ethnic complexity of the area, within a binary frame that fails to acknowledge the large presence of other migrant groups and the reciprocal permeability and transculturation between the Chinese community, the Italian community, and other ethnic groups. As part of a larger project, a group of scholars is currently digitally remapping Prato, to include quantitative and qualitative geolocalised information collected through a multidisciplinary method that includes ethnography, media analysis, translation studies, transcultural studies, and digital participatory action research. Through a brief description of the aims and characteristics of this research project, the paper will discuss the importance of rethinking the relationship between Italy and China, and between Italians and Chinese, within a more complex and nuanced transcultural frame.
Title: Ethnic enclave or transcultural edge? Reassessing the Prato district through digital mapping
Description:
Relations between Italy and other countries – such as China – are often imagined within a binary frame that essentialises national and ethnic communities and fails to recognise the complex transcultural ramifications of an increasingly globalising world.
This is particularly problematic when studying those social and cultural spaces that Ilaria Vanni (2016) has described as transcultural edges.
These are marginal spaces of transition and encounters between different cultures and societies, which have the potential to create new, innovative and productive ecosystems.
We argue that one such space is Prato, an industrial town near Florence, well known for its textile district, and host to one of the largest Chinese communities in Europe.
Significant academic attention has been devoted to the Chinese community in Prato, including studies of its social and economic impact on the host local community and the textile industry.
Most of these studies tend to isolate the Chinese community from the ethnic complexity of the area, within a binary frame that fails to acknowledge the large presence of other migrant groups and the reciprocal permeability and transculturation between the Chinese community, the Italian community, and other ethnic groups.
As part of a larger project, a group of scholars is currently digitally remapping Prato, to include quantitative and qualitative geolocalised information collected through a multidisciplinary method that includes ethnography, media analysis, translation studies, transcultural studies, and digital participatory action research.
Through a brief description of the aims and characteristics of this research project, the paper will discuss the importance of rethinking the relationship between Italy and China, and between Italians and Chinese, within a more complex and nuanced transcultural frame.

Related Results

Geo‐information mapping improves Canny edge detection method
Geo‐information mapping improves Canny edge detection method
AbstractAiming at the shortcomings of the current Canny edge detection method in terms of noise removal, threshold setting, and edge recognition, this paper proposes a method for i...
The Creation of an Ethnic Economy: Indochinese Business Expansion in Saint Paul*
The Creation of an Ethnic Economy: Indochinese Business Expansion in Saint Paul*
Abstract: Research on ethnic diversity in U.S. cities has focused on how the growth of a particular population within a defined, and often segregated, geographic area fosters the ...
THE FORCING EDGE FIXING EDGE-TO-VERTEX MONOPHONIC NUMBER OF A GRAPH
THE FORCING EDGE FIXING EDGE-TO-VERTEX MONOPHONIC NUMBER OF A GRAPH
For a connected graph G = (V, E), a set Se ⊆ E(G)–{e} is called an edge fixing edge-to-vertex monophonic set of an edge e of a connected graph G if every vertex of G lies on an e –...
The upper connected edge geodetic number of a graph
The upper connected edge geodetic number of a graph
For a non-trivial connected graph G, a set S ? V (G) is called an edge geodetic set of G if every edge of G is contained in a geodesic joining some pair of vertices in S. The...
Comparison of LA and PVC mapping using OCTARAY and OPTRELL catheters
Comparison of LA and PVC mapping using OCTARAY and OPTRELL catheters
AbstractBackgroundMultielectrode mapping catheters, such as the OCTARAY and OPTRELL, are essential in creating myocardial electroanatomical mapping in arrhythmias. The OCTARAY is a...

Back to Top