|
Showing 1 - 1 of
1 matches in All Departments
This book is grounded in an extended analogy between the 19th
century story of the Underground Railroad in North America,
transporting fugitive slaves to safety in the North, and the 21st
century routes and trails of migrant passages to and within Europe.
It begins as a kind of historical travelogue tracing the remnants
of the 19th-century Underground Railroad in the US and Canada,
including its legacies and unfulfilled heritage. It then shifts to
the political present by ethnographically sketching a series of
different border instances and situations, both external and within
the EU space (Ventimiglia, Athens, Paris, Calais, Ceuta and
Melilla, Patras, Pozzallo). Focusing on the violent harshening of
local border regimes, this book nonetheless suggests a different
picture, one conceived as the dynamic effect of both migrants
autonomy and of the solidarity provided by local and international
groups. Focusing on these specific and contested situations, it is
possible to reverse the image of a main borderland into one of a
space crisscrossed by many routes and passages. Reading those
experiences through the historical lens of the US antebellum
Underground Railroad, the book suggests the idea of an analogous
"Underground Europe".
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.