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Freedom, Only Freedom

The Prison Writings of Behrouz Boochani

Behrouz Boochani Moones Mansoubi Omid Tofighian

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English
Bloomsbury
15 November 2022
Over six years of imprisonment in Australia's offshore migrant detention centre, the Kurdish Iranian journalist and writer Behrouz Boochani bore personal witness to the suffering and degradation inflicted on him and his fellow refugees, culminating eventually in his prize-winning book No Friend But the Mountains - which he painstakingly typed out in text messages while incarcerated.

In the articles, essays and poems he wrote while detained, he emerged as both a tenacious campaigner and activist, as well as a deeply humane voice which spoke for the indignity and plight of the many thousands of detained migrants around the world.

In this book, his collected writings are combined with essays from experts on migration, refugee rights, politics and literature. Together, they provide a moving, creative and challenging account of not only one writer's harrowing experience and inspiring resilience, but the wider structures of violence which hold thousands of humans in a state of misery in migrant camps throughout the Western hemisphere and beyond.

By:  
Edited and translated by:   ,
Imprint:   Bloomsbury
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   ANZ Edition
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 153mm, 
Weight:   348g
ISBN:   9780755649358
ISBN 10:   0755649354
Pages:   344
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  ELT Advanced ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
List of Figures Foreword by Tara June Winch Writing in Languages of Freedom by Omid Tofighian Map Part One 2013-2015 - 'Fighting to Take Back My Identity': Creating a New Language in Collaboration Becoming MEG45 by Behrouz Boochani Unpublished Reports: Untitled and Two Souls - One Body by Behrouz Boochani Translating Manus and Nauru: Refugee Writing by Moones Mansoubi Collaborating with Behrouz Boochani: Two Journalists Against a System by Ben Doherty Part Two 2016 (Feb-April) - A New Theory: Examining the Prison, Exposing the System This is Manus Island. My Prison. My Torture. My Humiliation by Behrouz Boochani Life on Manus: Island of Damned by Behrouz Boochani Australia, Exceptional in its Brutality by Behrouz Boochani Testifying to History by Jordana Silverstein Part Three 2016 (June-Dec) - Journalism as Minor Epics: Confrontation, Survival and Death What it's Like in Solitary Confinement on Manus Island by Behrouz Boochani For Refugees Kidnapped and Exiled to the Manus Prison, Hope is Our Secret Weapon by Behrouz Boochani Untitled by Behrouz Boochani The Day My Friend Hamid Khazaei Died by Behrouz Boochani Faysal Ishak Ahmed's Life was Full of Pain. Australia Had a Duty to Protect Him by Behrouz Boochani Time and Borders, Policy and Lived Experience: A Posthumanist Critique by Sajad Kabgani Kurdish Identity and Journalism: Reporting to Record History by Roza Germian Part Four 2017 (Mar-Sept) - Introducing the Kyriarchal System: Knowing Manus Prison A Kyriarchal System: New Colonial Experiments/New Decolonial Resistance by Behrouz Boochani Unpublished Report: Untitled by Behrouz Boochani An Island off Manus by Behrouz Boochani The Tortuous Demise of Hamed Shamshiripour, Who Didn't Deserve to Die on Manus Island by Behrouz Boochani 'The Man Who Loves Ducks': The Refugee Saving Animals on Manus by Behrouz Boochani Epistemic Violence, Aesthetic Breaks, and the Man Who Loved Ducks by Anne McNevin Exposing 'Incalculable Cruelty': Writings on Border Harms and Atrocity as Resistance by Vicky Canning Part Five 2017 (Oct-Dec) - The Siege on Manus Prison: 23 Days of Collective Resistance Days Before the Forced Closure of Manus We Have No Safe Place to Go by Behrouz Boochani Diary of Disaster by Behrouz Boochani The Refugees Are in a State of Terror on Manus bu Behrouz Boochani A Merciless Fear Provoked by Last Night's Events has Gripped the Manus Island Camp by Behrouz Boochani Manus is a Landscape of Surreal Horror by Behrouz Boochani The Breath of Death on Manus Island: Starvation and Sickness by Behrouz Boochani All We Want is Freedom - Not Another Prison Camp by Behrouz Boochani I Write from Manus as a Duty to History. By Behrouz Boochani A Letter from Manus by Behrouz Boochani 23 Days of Resistance Alongside Behrouz by Shaminda Kanapathi Words That Escaped from Prison by Erik Jensen Part Six 2018 (Feb-June) - A Duty to History: Dignity, Time and Identity Four Years After Reza Barati's Death, We Still Have No Justice by Behrouz Boochani Policy of Exile by Behrouz Boochani Mohamed's Life Story is a Tragedy. But it's Typical for Father's Held on Manus by Behrouz Boochani The Gay, Transgender and Biosexual men on Manus are Forced into Silence by Behrouz Boochani Salim Fled Genocide to Find Safety. He Lost his Life in the Most Tragic Way by Behrouz Boochani Manus Island Poem by Behrouz Boochani Journalism, Borders and Oppression: The Nauru Context by Elahe Zivardar and Mehran Ghadiri On Mothers, Nature and the Body by Fatima Measham Part Seven 2018 (Aug)-2019 (Apr) - Manus Prison Theory: Creating a Body of Knowledge Manus Prison Theory by Behrouz Boochani Australia Needs a Moral Revolution by Behrouz Boochani Five Years in Manus Purgatory by Behrouz Boochani 'Sam Could Have Been Saved': Where Does the Money for Healthcare Go on Manus? by Behrouz Boochani The Paladin Scandal is Only a Drop in the Ocean of Corruption on Manus and Nauru by Behrouz Boochani Papua New Guinea Solution' in Australia's Public Discourse and Human Rights Activism by Mahnaz Alimardanian Australian Corruption and the Pacific: Dollars, Displacement and Death by Helen Davidson Part Eight 2019 (May-Oct) - Writing to Keep Hope Alive: New Dimensions to Systematic Torture This Election is an Opportunity to Vote for Humanity and Freedom by Behrouz Boochani 'The Boats are Coming' is One of the Greatest Lies Told to the Australian People by Behrouz Boochani The truth about self-harm in offshore detention by Behrouz Boochani Purification by Love by Behrouz Boochani Emotion, Responsibility and Hope for Different Futures by Claudia Tazreiter Prison Notebooks and the Oceanic-Kurdish Connection: Boochani's Political Reflectivity by Steven Ratuva Part Nine 2020 (May-June) - New Narratives and Knowledge: New Writing and Collaboration As I learn to live in freedom, Australia is still tormenting refugees by Behrouz Boochani 'A Human Being Feels They Are On a Precipice': COVID-19's Threshold Moment by Behrouz Boochani and Omid Tofighian Boochani's 'Political Poetics': Subverting and Reimagining the Fiction of Politics by Anne Surma Journalism as Dialogue: Creating Collective Activism Through the Prison Writings of Behrouz Boochani by Lida Amiri Part Ten 2020 (Sept) - Neocolonial experiments/Creative resistance For the refugees Australia Imprisons Music is Liberation, Life and Defiance by Behrouz Boochani 'White Australia' Policy Lives On in Immigration Detention by Behrouz Boochani On Documentation, Language, and Social Media by Arianna Grasso Carceral Coloniality as a History of the Present by Helena Zeweri List of Contributors

Behrouz Boochani is a Kurdish-Iranian writer, journalist, scholar, cultural advocate and filmmaker. Boochani was a writer and editor for the Kurdish language magazine Werya in Iran. He is a Visiting Professor, Birkbeck Law School; Associate Professor in Social Sciences at UNSW; non-resident Visiting Scholar at the Sydney Asia Pacific Migration Centre (SAPMiC), University of Sydney; Honorary Member of PEN International; and winner of an Amnesty International Australia 2017 Media Award, the Diaspora Symposium Social Justice Award, the Liberty Victoria 2018 Empty Chair Award, and the Anna Politkovskaya award for journalism. He publishes regularly with The Guardian, and his writing also features in The Saturday Paper, Huffington Post, New Matilda, The Financial Times and The Sydney Morning Herald. Boochani is also co-director (with Arash Kamali Sarvestani) of the 2017 feature-length film Chauka, Please Tell Us The Time; and collaborator on Nazanin Sahamizadeh's play Manus. His book, No Friend But The Mountains: Writing From Manus Prison won the 2019 Victorian Prize for Literature in addition to the Nonfiction category. He has also won the Special Award at the NSW Premier's Literary Awards, the Australian Book Industry Award for Nonfiction Book of the Year, and the National Biography Prize. Omid Tofighian is Adjunct Lecturer in the School of the Arts and Media, UNSW and Honorary Research Associate for the Department of Philosophy, University of Sydney. He is an award-winning lecturer, researcher and community advocate, combining philosophy with interests in citizen media, popular culture, displacement and discrimination. He is the translator of Behrouz Boochani's multi-award winning book No Friend but the Mountains: Writing From Manus Prison (2018). Moones Mansoubi is a community, arts and cultural development worker based in Sydney. Her work is dedicated mainly to supporting and collaborating with migrants and people seeking asylum in Australia. She has managed numerous community and cultural projects and the first translator of Behrouz Boochani's work when he began writing from Manus Island. She was translation consultant for Boochani's book No Friend but the Mountains: Writing from Manus Prison (Picador Australia 2018). Her translation of the article An Island Off Manus (Saturday Paper 6 May, 2017) was included in Boochani's winning nomination for the Amnesty Media Award in 2017. Moones has a Masters Degree in International Relations and is passionate about social justice and social cohesion. She is currently coordinator of the Community Refugee Welcome Centre in Inner West Sydney and a content producer for SBS Radio, Persian program.

Reviews for Freedom, Only Freedom: The Prison Writings of Behrouz Boochani

Behrouz Boochani's prison writings transcend journalism to become both a cry for justice, and an anatomy of a brutal prison system designed to strip its inmates of their identity, their aspirations, their agency, and crush their spirit. His writings are urgent, eloquent, and desperately poetic. Writing from within his Manus Prison, Boochani exposes the horror and inhumanity of Australia's offshore detention system, yet he also captures the uniqueness, comradeship, and intimate acts of resistance of his fellow inmates, and affirms their full humanity. He fulfils his mission, his duty to history , and ensures that this dark chapter in Australian history, and those who suffered its consequences are not forgotten. A tour de force in bearing witness. * Arnold Zable, author of The Fig Tree * International law entitled people fleeing persecution to claim asylum. But those who seek refuge in Australia are subjected to indefinite offshore detention - a form of torture designed to sap their spirit and traumatise their minds. Behrouz Boochani survives to tell the truth about the cruelty of this policy, in a book which should open the eyes of Australians to a cruelty for which they are politically and morally responsible. These are writings of literary power and first-hand authenticity, with a message of urgent importance at a time when the siren slogan of offshore detention is appealing to governments in the UK and elsewhere. When will we recognise that it is both unprincipled and inhumane to punish the innocent? * Geoffrey Robertson AO QC * Behrouz Boochani's newspaper articles about the Manus Prison have lost none of their original immediacy. This book also showcases some of the rich conversations prompted by his writings. A must-read for anybody wondering about what might happen when governments opt for an Australian solution and shirk their responsibilities towards refugees. * Klaus Neumann, author of Across the Seas (2015) * Behrouz Boochani's work matters not merely because it bears journalistic witness to the brutality of mandatory refugee detentions but also because it distils that experience into a sophisticated theory of power and resistance. This book offers a deep engagement with a truly original writer. * Jeff Sparrow, author of Crimes Against Nature, (2021) * No writer wants to be a prison writer, no exile dreams of displacement without end. But nothing illuminates totalitarian thinking better than the power of creative imagination. We are fortunate that Behrouz Boochani and his friends summoned the courage to push the experience of Australia's refugee regime into words. This stunning collection chronicles Boochani's determination not to vanish. Freedom, Only Freedom is absolutely necessary reading for all those who want to understand what moral responsibility, political courage, and the anti-totalitarian imagination mean today. * Lyndsey Stonebridge, Professor of Humanities and Human Rights, University of Birmingham, UK, and author of Placeless People * Focused on - but not limited to - his individual journey into exile, Behrouz Bouchani's Freedom Only Freedom offers a provocative and vivid criticism of politics of incarceration, alienation, and subjugation of displaced refugees across the world with specific reference to the case Australia. He has created a new lexicon to reckon with the traumas of border-crossing, displacement, and alienation. * Fatemeh Shams, author of A Revolution in Rhyme: Poetic Co-Option Under the Islamic Republic * A necessary book in the era of border fetishism. Boochani shows us that the current punitive migration measures are rooted in a racist colonial history. Through linking the struggle of the indigenous people of Kurdistan to the struggle of migrants incarcerated by the Australian state in Manus Prison Boochani unfolds how a progressive political subjectivity emerges from the ruins of the nation-states system. Freedom, Only Freedom is a collection of critical and thoughtful contributions to scholarship on contemporary bordering practices. * Shahram Khosravi, Stockholm University, Sweden * Manus is a polite form of torture, designed to deny us the privilege of people like Behrouz. It is often forgotten that the trial judgment in the Tampa case was delivered just 8 hours before the terrible 9/11 attack on America. Our government ramped up calling boat people like Behrouz illegals . It's a lie: Behrouz points out that he broke no law, committed no crime, and had no trial, but was jailed for years. * Julian Burnside, AO, KC * This collected volume of Boochani's prison writings - supported and contextualised by essays from experts in migration, refugee rights, politics and literature - is profound and necessary reading for anyone interested in literature and human rights. Boochani's prison writings, though produced under horrendous conditions, are poetic, sharp in observation and generous in ambit. His body of work documenting firsthand the atrocities inflicted on refugees by the Australian government and their mandatory detention policies has allowed the world to bear witness to human rights violations which might otherwise have remained in the dark. * Maxine Clarke, Author of The Hate Race *


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