Journal: Culture & Psychology
Online Publication Date: First published online June 27, 2022
Abstract
The migration phenomenon, in which the mind travels ahead of the body, especially among would-be travellers, has received scholarly attention within migration studies. Research in this area has not unpacked the cognitive migration experiences of those who have already moved. This autoethnographic article explores the feelings, thoughts and experiences of an individual living abroad in the United Kingdom but cognitively imprisoned at his ancestral home in Igbo land. It draws on the concept of cognitive migration and the author’s own experiences and feelings to introduce and explain the phenomenon of cognitive immobility, which exemplifies the dialectical conflict between the aspirations of longing for and emotions of belonging to a place against a simultaneous desire to remain distant from it. This article advocates the recognition of this cognitive experience of being trapped in place while mobilised in-person elsewhere in migration studies, providing a lens to view such experiences that have erstwhile received inadequate attention. This article contributes to the growing body of knowledge in relation to cognitive migration processes and experiences of those contemplating or participating in human mobility.
Key Takeaways:
This article introduces to the literature the concept of Cognitive Immobility:
- ‘The article describes cognitive immobility as a stressful feeling of mental entrapment that causes a conscious or unconscious effort to relive past episodes in places one lived or visited in the past to reclaim what one may be missing or left behind’ (p.772).
- The articles also introduces the three stages of cognitive immobility
- Awareness/separation
- Retrieval
- Stabilisation
Citation:
Olumba, E.E., 2023. The homeless mind in a mobile world: An autoethnographic approach on cognitive immobility in international migration. Culture & Psychology, 29(4), pp.769-790.