Becoming Fugitive

ACME Pub Date : 2023-10-30 DOI:10.7202/1107312ar
Leslie Gross-Wyrtzen, Alondra Vázquez López
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article tells the stories of illegalized migrant people moving through two violent, transcontinental borderscapes: the EurAfrican border that spans Western Europe, the Mediterranean Sea, and pushes further south each year across Africa; and the American border that stretches from the interior of the United States, through Mexico and Central America, and into South America and the Caribbean. Comparative analysis of these borderscapes reveals similar logics, practices, and policies of border enforcement, as well as strategies that migrant people use to subvert them. We argue that fugitivity provides a critical lens for understanding the co-constitution of borders and border transgression, and reveals how the border manufactures its objects—producing fugitive subjects, spaces, and relations across expanding spatial and temporal distances. As a lens rooted in histories of racialized control over human mobility, fugitivity allows us to chart contemporary territorializations of racial domination through bordering alongside constant challenges to these territorializations through movement. Ultimately, fugitivity provides a method that not only maps out the violence and failures of bordering, but one that imagines alternative geographies emanating from the underground of marginalized people, spaces, and relationships.

成为逃犯
这篇文章讲述了非法移民穿越两个充满暴力的跨大陆边界的故事:横跨西欧、地中海并每年向南穿越非洲的欧非边界;以及从美国内陆,穿过墨西哥和中美洲,进入南美洲和加勒比地区的美国边界。对这些边境景观的比较分析揭示了类似的逻辑、实践和边境执法政策,以及移民用来颠覆它们的策略。我们认为,逃亡性为理解边界和边界越界的共同构成提供了一个关键视角,并揭示了边界如何制造其客体——在不断扩大的空间和时间距离上制造逃亡主体、空间和关系。作为一个根植于人类流动的种族化控制历史的镜头,逃亡性使我们能够通过边界以及通过运动对这些领土化的不断挑战来描绘当代种族统治的领土化。最终,逃亡提供了一种方法,不仅可以描绘出边界的暴力和失败,还可以想象从边缘人群、空间和关系的地下散发出的另一种地理位置。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACME
ACME Social Sciences-Geography, Planning and Development
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: ACME is an on-line international journal for critical and radical analyses of the social, the spatial and the political. The journal"s purpose is to provide a forum for the publication of critical and radical work about space in the social sciences - including anarchist, anti-racist, environmentalist, feminist, Marxist, non-representational, postcolonial, poststructuralist, queer, situationist and socialist perspectives. Analyses that are critical and radical are understood to be part of the praxis of social and political change aimed at challenging, dismantling, and transforming prevalent relations, systems, and structures of capitalist exploitation, oppression, imperialism, neo-liberalism, national aggression, and environmental destruction.
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