Bodies Folded in Migrant Crypts: Dis/Ability and the Material Culture of Border-Crossing
This article considers media narratives that suggest that hiding in trucks, buses, and other vehicles to cross borders has, in fact, been a common practice in the context of migration to, and within, Europe. We aim to problematize how the tension between the materiality of bordering practices and hu...
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doaj-e6443ab51e004f0d9705e2990a2e8b512020-11-24T21:01:30ZengMDPI AGSocieties2075-46982016-04-01621010.3390/soc6020010soc6020010Bodies Folded in Migrant Crypts: Dis/Ability and the Material Culture of Border-CrossingVasilis Galis0Spyros Tzokas1Aristotle Tympas2Technologies in Practice, IT University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen 2300, DenmarkDepartment of European Civilization Studies, Hellenic Open University, Patra 26335, GreeceDepartment of Philosophy and History of Science, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens 15771, GreeceThis article considers media narratives that suggest that hiding in trucks, buses, and other vehicles to cross borders has, in fact, been a common practice in the context of migration to, and within, Europe. We aim to problematize how the tension between the materiality of bordering practices and human migrants generates a dis/abled subject. In this context, dis/ability may be a cause or consequence of migration, both in physical/material (the folding of bodies in the crypt) and cultural/semiotic terms, and may become a barrier to accessing protection, to entering and/or crossing a country, and to performing mobility in general. Dis/ability and migration have not been associated in the literature. We adopt an analytical symmetry between humans and non-humans, in this case between bodies and crypts. By suggesting an infected, ambivalent, and hybrid approach to the human subject, the body-crypt traveling border challenges the essentialist dichotomies between technology and biology, disability and impairment. The articles and reports upon which we rely were collected through extensive searches of databases/archives of online newspapers and news websites.http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/6/2/10border-crossingcryptsmigrationdis/abilitynarratives |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Vasilis Galis Spyros Tzokas Aristotle Tympas |
spellingShingle |
Vasilis Galis Spyros Tzokas Aristotle Tympas Bodies Folded in Migrant Crypts: Dis/Ability and the Material Culture of Border-Crossing Societies border-crossing crypts migration dis/ability narratives |
author_facet |
Vasilis Galis Spyros Tzokas Aristotle Tympas |
author_sort |
Vasilis Galis |
title |
Bodies Folded in Migrant Crypts: Dis/Ability and the Material Culture of Border-Crossing |
title_short |
Bodies Folded in Migrant Crypts: Dis/Ability and the Material Culture of Border-Crossing |
title_full |
Bodies Folded in Migrant Crypts: Dis/Ability and the Material Culture of Border-Crossing |
title_fullStr |
Bodies Folded in Migrant Crypts: Dis/Ability and the Material Culture of Border-Crossing |
title_full_unstemmed |
Bodies Folded in Migrant Crypts: Dis/Ability and the Material Culture of Border-Crossing |
title_sort |
bodies folded in migrant crypts: dis/ability and the material culture of border-crossing |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Societies |
issn |
2075-4698 |
publishDate |
2016-04-01 |
description |
This article considers media narratives that suggest that hiding in trucks, buses, and other vehicles to cross borders has, in fact, been a common practice in the context of migration to, and within, Europe. We aim to problematize how the tension between the materiality of bordering practices and human migrants generates a dis/abled subject. In this context, dis/ability may be a cause or consequence of migration, both in physical/material (the folding of bodies in the crypt) and cultural/semiotic terms, and may become a barrier to accessing protection, to entering and/or crossing a country, and to performing mobility in general. Dis/ability and migration have not been associated in the literature. We adopt an analytical symmetry between humans and non-humans, in this case between bodies and crypts. By suggesting an infected, ambivalent, and hybrid approach to the human subject, the body-crypt traveling border challenges the essentialist dichotomies between technology and biology, disability and impairment. The articles and reports upon which we rely were collected through extensive searches of databases/archives of online newspapers and news websites. |
topic |
border-crossing crypts migration dis/ability narratives |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/6/2/10 |
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