字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 [MUSIC PLAYING] SANDRA BERMANN: Good morning. STEPHEN MACEDO: Hi. How are you? SANDRA BERMANN: How are you? SUBJECT: Coffee all? SANDRA BERMANN: Yes. Coffee would be great, thank you. STEPHEN MACEDO: Me too, please. Thank you. SANDRA BERMANN: You know, the whole question of migration through the ages -- since biblical times, we've had it. But now, in our lived history, we have a refugee crisis. We have more migration than we've had since World War II. And I started thinking about this community and the possibility of having one in doing my own work on translation studies but also literary history and started to realize how much I needed to know to talk about some of these things in the current period. So I went to a couple of colleagues and talked with them, learned a lot, and started to think about how much it would mean to have a group of faculty from roundabout campus who could talk about these things and, in innovative ways, share knowledge, share ways of thinking about this issue, and how, eventually, this could have a huge ripple effect on campus through our teaching, through having student affiliates, graduate and undergraduates. And, perhaps, over time, we will see opportunities for changing the public discourse and developing it into something that can create better solutions or at least better debates about them. STEPHEN MACEDO: Yeah. We probably need to understand why people see this issue, you know, so differently, disagree so widely -- where they're coming from, what their perceptions are, what their misperceptions are, and how this can be clarified. One of the things I find most interesting is that this is an issue that doesn't cut across the usual left-right divide cleanly. There are liberals that worry about high levels of immigration because of the impact on the working class. There are conservatives that worry about high levels of immigration both for that reason but also because of effects on the culture and because of concerns about cultural stability. On the other hand, there are progressives that are in favor, of course, of high levels of immigration, generous policy towards refugees and poorer migrants from abroad. And, likewise, there are conservatives who believe in open markets and open borders, a little more libertarian. So these issues are difficult ones for both of the major political parties, in a way. And it makes them interesting. Then the question of who is a refugee is a central one that hasn't been all together settled. It's a disputed category in international law. And are people that move out of great poverty refugees or merely economic migrants? A lot of these issues need a lot more attention as a matter of policy and law. SANDRA BERMANN: Absolutely. And one of the fascinating things is the whole use of language and translation, because what if you are migrant and you do not understand the language of the country into which you've migrated? To have good translation that's consistent -- these questions have always fascinated me. And I think those were some of the issues that attracted me, at the beginning, trying to think about this much more broadly. So there are all these questions in the humanities that fit into this larger issue of migration. STEPHEN MACEDO: I guess another question is, you know, what does it mean to be an American? And what does it mean to be French in periods of rising and large-scale immigration? How do narratives change? And I know that scholars of literature are studying that. SANDRA BERMANN: Absolutely. I mean, the question of narratives and narratives of migration is absolutely huge and crosses the disciplines. And we each look at it very differently. But if you think of, as you were saying, the narratives that tell us our nationhood or why governments choose certain programs -- migration programs -- then there are also the journalists’ stories that try to get very close to the migrant lives and can be short or in book form. And then there are, of course, all the literary narratives -- literary and filmic, visual arts, music -- that explore other aspects of it. So it's a huge question -- a huge cultural question. STEPHEN MACEDO: Yeah. And one of the exciting things about the research community is that scholars bring all of these different perspectives to bear. I mean, some people are unnerved by these changes in what it means to be an American. SANDRA BERMANN: Of course. STEPHEN MACEDO: But the American story is one of constant change. SANDRA BERMANN: Absolutely. STEPHEN MACEDO: And it's great strength that we have an immigrant history. SANDRA BERMANN: It's so interesting to hear what other national perspectives are on this, which can be very different, and to have people in our research community who are working on, you know, the Pacific Asian world, who are working on Europe and also Latin America and the U.S. and many other parts of the world, the Middle East. So it's really very interesting comparatively, as well, in terms of region. STEPHEN MACEDO: Yeah. And we've got here some of the best scholars in the Woodrow Wilson School, sociology, political science, in my neck of the woods, also -- philosophy, economics -- working on both the empirical and the moral dimensions of these questions. And I look forward to, you know, doing more. [MUSIC PLAYING]