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195 Pages·2016·14.12 MB·English
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Borderlands Towards an Anthropology of the Cosmopolitan Condition Michel Agier Translated by David Fernbach First published in French as La condition cosmopolite: L'a11thropologie à l'épreuve du piège idel1titaire, (c) Éditions La Découverte, Paris, 2013 This English edition (c) Polity Press, 2016 Politv Press 65 B~idge Street Cambridge CB2 l UR, UK Polity Press 350 Main Street Malden, MA 02148, USA AlI rights reserved. Except for the quotation of short passages for the pUl"pOSe of âiticism and review, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. ISBN-13: 978-0-7456-9679-9 ISBN-13: 978-0-7456-9680-5 (pb) A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Agier, Michel, 1953- Title: Borderlands : towards an anthropology of the cosmopolitan condition 1 Michel Agier. Other tides: Condition cosmopolite. English Description: Malden, MA : Polit y Press, 2016.1 Includes bibliographical references and index. ldentifiers: LCCN 2015048690 (print) 1 LCCN 2016010176 (ebook) 1 ISBN 9780745696799 (hardcover : alk. paper) 1 ISBN 0745696791 (hardcover : alk. paper) 1 ISBN 9780745696805 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1 ISBN 0745696805 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1I SBN 9780745696829 (mobi) 1 ISBN 9780745696836 (epub) Subjecrs: LCSH: Cosmopolitanism. 1M ulticulturalism. 1 Globalization. 1 Group identity. Classification: LCC ]Z1308 .A3813 2016 (print) 1 LCC JZ1308 (ebook) 1 DDC 303.48/2--dc23 LC record available at http://lc:cn.loc.gov/2015048690 Typeset in 10.5 on 12pt Sabon by Servis Filmsetting Ltd, Stockport, Cheshire Printed and bound in the UK by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CRO 4YY The publisher has used its best endeavours to ensure that the URLs for external websites referred to in this book are correct and active at the time of going to press. However, the publisher has no responsibility for the websites and can make no guarantee that a site will remain live or that the content is or will remain appropriate. Every effort has been made to trace ail copyright holders, but if any have been inadvertently overlooked the publisher will be pleased to include any necessary credits in any subsequent reprint or edition. For further information on Polity , visit our website: politybooks.com C NTENTS Preface to the English Edition Vlll Introduction: The Migrant, the Border and the World 1 Blocked at the border 2 Indifference and solidarities 3 Borders and walls 5 Borderlands and their inhabitants: a banal cosmopolitism 6 Part 1 Ve1centrulg 1 Forms the Border 15 la ....' ''::'.."11-.....· ,,, The border as centre of reflection 16 Temporal, social and spatial dimensions of the border ritual 18 Community and locality: the border as social 19 An anthropology offin the border 23 2 as 37 War at the borders 37 Is the world a problem? Cosmopolitical reality and realpolitik 39 Violence at the border: the outside of the nation 46 Walls of war 53 v CONTENTS 3 Border Dwellers Borderlands: Studies of Banal Cosmopolitism 58 The border dwellers: figures and places of relative foreignness 59 Being-in-the-·world on the border: a new COslTIopolitan condition 71 Part II Decentred vM'UI .... '. .... 83 A critical moment: the conten1porary turn in anthropology 84 The end of the 'great divide' 87 Decentring reconceived 95 A contemporary and situational anthropology 101 Race: 106 Civilization as hyper-border: mirrors of Africa 107 The migration of spirits: mobilities and identity-based cultures 116 Race and racism: how can one be black? 125 Escaping the identity trap 134 An anthropology of the subject 137 decentred subject: three situational analyses 146 Moments the 153 an Notes 158 Index 177 VI He walks on the wind. And, in the wind, he knows himself. No four walls hem in the wind. And the wind is a compass for the Horth in a foreign land. He says: I come from that place. I come from here, and I am neither here nor there. I have two names that come together but pull apart. I have two languages, but I have forgotten which is the language of my dreams. Mahmoud Darwish, 'CouHterpoint (Homage to Edward Said)', 2007 It was night. The ninth night. We came to a mountain pass. The trafficker shouted: 'Stop a moment! Look baclc' We aIl stopped. We alllooked baclc 'This is your last look at your land.' The land, beneath the whiteness of the snow, had become invisible in the darkness. Only the traces of our steps. Everyone cried. Then we l'an to the border. On the other side was an expanse covered with snow, white as a sheet of paper. Not a footprint. Not a word. And its margins lost in the dark night. Atiq Rahimi, 'The Ninth Night', Le Retour 2005 CE 0 ENGLIS ED Frontières was the working tide for thefirst French edition of this book, written between 2010 and 2012 and published in 2013. Only at the last moment was it changed to La Condition cosmopolite, from a desire to spell out the perspective of my reflections here. Yet lrontières do occupy the greater part of the book, and it is this that 1 wanted to restore by putting 'border' back in the tide for the second edition (and the present English edition), which is a much revised and modified version of the original essay. At the same time, the discussion aroused by the original publication has led me to clarify what cosmopolitan 'condition' we have in rnind in speaking of the movement of migrants, of life in border spaces, and of the relation ships that are forn1ed there. The condition 1 discuss here is that of ordinary or 'banal' cosrnopolitism, in a sense quite close to that of 'banal nationalism' that Michael Billig has written about in relation to the everyday practices and litde signs that exhibit the belonging of individuals to a nation.l Ordinary cosmopolitism is n1ade up of the everyday arrangements 111ade by those women and Inen who are in the 'labyrinth of the foreigner' (Alfred Schütz's expression) without yet having managed to emerge from it, who settle in the border situa tion, have to deal with other languages, ways of acting, thinking and governing, and adapt and transform themselves by this obligatory exercise. This led me to describe border situations and borderlands more generally, and to exhibit the paradox of the wall, which is at the same time an imitation and a negation of the border. Persons in displacelnent may weIl be in the process of living an more univers al than it might appear, beyond the cat egories, classes and nationalities that are involved today. Even if they find themselves 'on the margin', they enable us to anticipate a way of V 111 PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION being-in-the-world that globalization is tending to generalize. In this conception, cosmopolitism is Hot the monopoly of a globalized elite. On the contrary, it is the experience of the roughness of the world by aIl those who, by taste, necessity or cOlnpulsion, by des ire or by habit, are led 1'0 live in several places almost simultaneously and, in the absence of ubiquity, to live increasingly in mobility, even in an in-between. 1 have also taken advantage of this new edition to bring clarifi cations, further research and bibliographie data, and new lines of argument that 1 felt were lacking in the initial version. And finaIly, 1 have reorganized the whole book around two topics that may be read either successively or in paraIlel: 'decentring the world' and 'the decentred subject'. 1 am deeply grateful 1'0 Rémy Toulouse, François Cèze and John Thompson for their editorial advice, as weIl as to Marc Abélès, Rigas Arvanitis, Étienne Balibar, Mamadou Diouf, Michel Naepels and Étienne Tassin for their comments and suggestions on earlier versions of the text. And finally 1 thank Patricia Birman (State University of Rio de Janeiro), José Sergio Leite Lopes (Colegio Brasileiro de Altos Estudos/Federal University of Rio de Janeiro) and Bruno Calvalcanti (Federal University of Alagoas) for their welcome in Rio and Maceio between September and December 2014, where 1 found both the time and the context to write this new version and discuss certain develop ments of it. IX CTIO : THE GRANT, AND THE RLD Since the late 1990s, migrants ongmating in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Egypt, Libya, Sudan or Eritrea, more recently joined by young Palestinians from Lebanon, have found their way to the port of Patras - a small Greek town on the shore of the Ionian Sea, and the point of departure of cargo boats for Venice, Ancona and Bari in Italy. What the migrants are after here is a crossing to Europe. This is what I saw one February day in 2009, a few metres from the border control. A group of sorne twenty Afghans are walking along the edge of the road outside the port. They are waiting, as they do every day, for the lorries moving slowly towards the port, to be loaded into the holds of ships that take them and their goods to Italy. When one of these arrives the young people start running, a couple of them try to open the rear doors of the lorry and, if they manage to do so, hold the doors open while still running as one or two others hurriedly try to climb up. Sorne shouts, sometimes laughter, as this inevitably becomes aimost a game. Certain drivers, annoyed by this daiIy exercise, sadistically play at accelerating and braking to make the climbers faH off. Stationed on the roadside is a police car, in which four policemen continue to chat as they observe the young people running a few Inetres away. Finally, on the other side of the road beyond a patch of grass, there is a prestige apartment block whose entire ground floor is occupied by a plate-glass window. Behind the glass you can see a fitness centre, its various apparatuses positioned so that while using them you can see what is happening outside. Side by on exercise bikes treadn1il1s are a dozen pedalling or running on the spot while placidly watching the young Afghans in their behind the lorries. In their field of vision they also have the 1

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The images of migrants and refugees arriving in precarious boats on the shores of southern Europe, and of the makeshift camps that have sprung up in Lesbos, Lampedusa, Calais and elsewhere, have become familiar sights on television screens around the world. But what do we know about the border place
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