Book launch of Simone Toji’s new book “The Immensity of Being Singular"

Invitation to attend the launch of Dr Simone Toji’s new open access book “The Immensity of Being Singular: Approaching Migrant Lives through Resonance”. Simone is a Newton International Fellow from São Paulo, Brazil, currently visiting at the UI.

GettyImages_1164821077_Maiquel Jantsch

This hybrid event will take place 8th November 2023 in Channing Hall in Sheffield and online. It will be chaired by Philipp Horn, The University of Sheffield with commentators Olivia Casagrande and Abdoumaliq Simone The University of Sheffield, Nigel Rapport, University of St Andrews and Fraya Frehse, University of São Paulo.

About the book…Acknowledging ‘messiness’ as integral to the life processes of international migrants living in the city of São Paulo, the book is an invitation to appreciate the contradictions and ambiguities involved in the making of contingent urban lives. It is also a critique of generalisation and essentialisation as legitimate operations in migration and urban studies. By paying attention to the messiness embedding the journeys of some international migrants, life can be conceived and lived in singular ways, even among those who were born in the same country of origin. To do justice to the singularity of these lives, the book, as an ethnographic endeavour, finds in Lévinas’s idea of the ‘irreducibility of the Other’ a theoretical way to evoke migrants’ lives in their potentialities and ambiguities, without de-facing them in operations of generalisation, coherence, and consistency. It also uses imagination and fiction to establish an empathic disposition towards the experiences of these international migrants, proposed as ‘resonance.’ As follows, five singular life stories of migrants from Paraguay, South Korea, China, and Bolivia are rendered as journeys across the city of São Paulo and the world. Here is a proposal of an anthropological approach that is more an ethics – a considerate attendance to the presence of others in the world - than a form of knowledge; an anthropological approach in which truth is not the outcome of a series of scientific procedures, but a form of appreciation of the human.

The book can be downloaded for free here

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