感知边界:在无限期拘留期间和之后的声音和身体亲密关系

IF 1.7 3区 社会学 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Poppy de Souza, E. Russell
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引用次数: 8

摘要

这篇文章探讨了一个基于声音的数字项目,该项目是与澳大利亚和巴布亚新几内亚被无限期拘留的难民和寻求庇护者共同创建的,旨在加深对边境的感官暴力——以及对边境的抵抗——以及他们对亲密领域的重新排序的理解。在《你今天在哪里》(2020)中,难民/寻求庇护者用10分钟的声音小插曲对他们的尸体环境进行了编目,这些小插曲连续30天每天通过短信分发给听众。这篇文章借鉴了感官方法论和女权主义对亲密关系的取向,思考了这个声音项目如何提醒我们一种另类的感官政治,这种政治与抵抗澳大利亚种族化边境政权的安静、日常和疲惫的劳动相适应。通过仔细聆听选定的录音,我们认为,通过《你今天在哪里》分享的亲密关系产生了关于护理、呼吸、触摸和无限期拘留等待的具体实践的知识。网络化的跨境声音项目可能会扰乱被监禁和未被监禁的受试者与环境的关系,为以新的方式与边境建立联系开辟了可能。我们得出的结论是,尽管边境存在情感暴力,但该项目的创作者还是在边境内建立并维持了亲密关系,而在无限期拘留内外,声音是传达和创造这些亲密关系的一种特别有情感和唤起人回忆的手段。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sensing the border(s): Sound and carceral intimacies in and beyond indefinite detention
This article examines a sound-based digital project co-created with refugees and asylum seekers held in indefinite detention in Australia and Papua New Guinea to advance understandings of the sensory violence of borders – and resistance to borders – and their reordering of intimate realms. In where are you today (2020), refugees/asylum seekers catalogued their carceral environments in 10-minute sonic vignettes which were distributed to listeners daily via text message, for 30 consecutive days. Drawing on sensory methodologies and feminist orientations towards the intimate, the article considers how this sound project alerts us to an alternative sensory politics attuned to the quiet, quotidian and exhausting labour of resisting Australia’s racialised border regime. Through a close listening to selected recordings, we argue the intimacies shared through where are you today produce knowledge about embodied practices of care, breath, touch and waiting in indefinite detention. Networked, transborder sound projects can unsettle both incarcerated and non-incarcerated subjects’ relationships to their environments, opening affiliative possibilities for coming into relation with the border(s) in new ways. We conclude that the project’s creators forge and sustain carceral intimacies within and despite the border’s affective violence, and that sound is a particularly affective and evocative means of conveying and creating these intimacies, in and beyond indefinite detention.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
11.10%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Crime, Media, Culture is a fully peer reviewed, international journal providing the primary vehicle for exchange between scholars who are working at the intersections of criminological and cultural inquiry. It promotes a broad cross-disciplinary understanding of the relationship between crime, criminal justice, media and culture. The journal invites papers in three broad substantive areas: * The relationship between crime, criminal justice and media forms * The relationship between criminal justice and cultural dynamics * The intersections of crime, criminal justice, media forms and cultural dynamics
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