<p>‘A superb collection of contemporary excursions into little explored European worlds and from the vantage point of migrants themselves.’<br />Brad Blitz, Middlesex University, EuropeNow Issue 25</p>
- .,
Migrating borders and moving timesanalyses migrant border crossings in relation to their everyday experiences of time and connects these to wider social and political structures. Sometimes border crossing takes no more than a moment; sometimes hours; some crossers find themselves in the limbo of detention; for others, the crossing lasts a lifetime to be interrupted only by death. Borders not only define separate spaces, but different temporalities. This book provides both a single interpretative frame and a novel approach to border crossing: an analysis of the reconfiguration of memory, personal and group time that follows the migrants' renegotiation of cross-border space and recalibrations of temporality.
An electronic edition of this book is freely available under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND) licence.
Introduction: Crossing borders, changing times
Madeleine Hurd, Hastings Donnan and Carolin Leutloff-Grandits
1 EU cross-border Passagenwerk
Olivier Thomas Kramsch
2 Negotiating 'neighbourliness' in Sarajevo apartment blocks
Zaira Lofranco
3 Border crossings, shame and (re-)narrating the past in the Ukrainian-Romanian borderlands
Kathryn Cassidy
4 Travelling genealogies: tracing relatedness and diversity in the Albanian-Montenegrin borderland
Jelena Tosic
5 Living on borrowed time: borders, ticking clocks and timelessness among temporary labour migrants in Israel
Robin A. Harper and Hani Zubida
6 New pasts, presents and futures: time and space in family migrant networks between Kosovo and western Europe
Carolin Leutloff-Grandits
7 Silenced border crossings and gendered material flows in southern Albania
Nataša Gregoric Bon
8 Missing migrants: deaths at sea and unidentified bodies in Lesbos
Iosif Kovras and Simon Robins
This study explores how crossing borders entails shifting time as well as changing geographical location. Space has long dominated the field of border studies, a prominence which the recent spatial turn in social science has reinforced. This book challenges the classic analytical pre-eminence of space by focusing on how border time is shaped by, shapes and constitutes the borders themselves.
Using original field data from Israel, northern Europe and Europe's south-eastern borders; Kosovo, Albania, Montenegro, Sarajevo, Lesbos, the contributors explore everyday forms of border temporality - the ways in which people through their temporal practices manage, shape, represent and constitute the borders across which they move or at which they are made to halt. These accounts are based on fine-tuned ethnographic research sensitive to historical depth and wider political-economic context and transformation, in which moving is understood not only as mobility but as affect, where borders become not just something to be crossed but something that is emotionally experienced and felt.
With its multidisciplinary and comparative perspective on Europe's borders, this book will be of interest to a broad range of scholars in border studies, migration studies, European studies, anthropology, politics, geography, sociology and history.
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Hastings Donnan is Director of the Senator George J. Mitchell Institute for Global Peace, Security and Justice at Queen's University Belfast
Madeleine Hurd is Senior Lecturer in the Department of History at Södertörn University
Carolin Leutloff-Grandits is Lecturer at the Centre for South Eastern European History and Anthropology, University of Graz