Summary: | The paper discusses the intricate power systems working within the current EU migration regime. It analyzes how constructions of sovereignty and vulnerability become both racialized and gendered to dehumanize the ‘migrant other.’ In a first step, Foucault’s study on biopower and the birth of modern sovereignty as the 'right to make live and let die' is compared to Mbembe’s notion of 'necropolitics', shifting the focus from the management of (migrant) life to the management of (migrant) death. As sovereignty works through constructions of impermeability, the paper shows, in a second step, how Butler deconstructs sovereignty as a narcissistic fantasy and reconceptualizes vulnerability as empowering sharedness, not victimhood and passivity. Consequently, resistance might rise from vulnerability to fight those necro- and biopolitics that render racialized and gendered populations less 'grievable'. Discussing grievability via visualizations of migrant drowning, humanitarian affectivity, and moral economies are complicit with the EU migration regime. Its politics of drowning leave racialized and gendered populations in the Mediterranean to die to maintain Europe’s putative sovereignty by which ‘Europe,’ eventually, becomes undone. From these fragmented leftovers, the paper concludes, the sharedness of vulnerability discloses and opens leeway for protest and a new beginning.
|