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Challenging the comfort zone: self-discovery, everyday practices and international student mobility to the Global South

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  • Laura Prazeres

Abstract

This paper scrutinises the underlying motivations of short-term international students by unpacking the notion of ‘leaving the comfort zone’ for self-discovery and self-change. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with Canadian exchange students volunteering and studying in the Global South, the paper contributes to scholarship on everyday and emotional geographies of international student mobility and wider debates in mobility by examining how emotions of comfort and discomfort as well as everyday practices are productive for self-discovery, belonging, home-making and distinction. It reveals how students align the boundaries of their comfort zone and an un/reflexive self along the international and imaginative borders of the Global North/South. Contrary to tourism and mobility studies, I argue that students view everyday life and their relative immobility while abroad as both a distinctive and reflexive exercise. I suggest that students want to extend the boundaries of their comfort zone and their sense of ‘home’ to the Global South.

Suggested Citation

  • Laura Prazeres, 2017. "Challenging the comfort zone: self-discovery, everyday practices and international student mobility to the Global South," Mobilities, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 12(6), pages 908-923, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:rmobxx:v:12:y:2017:i:6:p:908-923
    DOI: 10.1080/17450101.2016.1225863
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