The politics of art, death and refuge : the turning tide / Helen Hintjens.
2022
N72.P6
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Title
The politics of art, death and refuge : the turning tide / Helen Hintjens.
Author
Hintjens, Helen M., author.
ISBN
9783031098918 (electronic bk.)
3031098919 (electronic bk.)
9783031098901
3031098900
3031098919 (electronic bk.)
9783031098901
3031098900
Published
Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, [2022]
Copyright
©2022
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xx, 321 pages) : illustrations (some color)
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-031-09891-8 doi
Call Number
N72.P6
Dewey Decimal Classification
701.03
Summary
This book deals in different ways with the politics of death, with art and politics and with the politics of refuge and asylum. Cutting across these fields brings to the fore the fluid quality of social life under late capitalism. The elements of time, space and emotion are part of the overall approach adopted. The individual chapters illustrate themes of despair, striving and the politics of hope, and bring out the fluid and unpredictable qualities of social life. The guiding metaphor is fluidity, or what Urry refers to as "waves; continuous flow; pulsing; fluidity and viscosity" characteristic of life, death, refuge and art under the contemporary global system. Between the worlds of culture, political violence and art, the interconnected themes in this study illuminate conditions of 'liminality', or in-betweenness. The study presents a politics of hope under late capitalism, and cuts through more usual boundaries between art and science, harm and help, death and the politics of bare life. Each chapter grapples with issues that help illustrate wider trends in Global Development and International Relations scholarship and teaching. Amidst growing cynicism about human or even humanitarian values, the volume appeals for a politics of hope and social justice, based on the fluid contours of borderless and amorphous processes of self-organising and radical anarchy. Helen Hintjens is Assistant Professor in Development and Social Justice at the International Institute of Social Studies in The Hague, The Netherlands. For more than 30 years she has studied the comparative asylum policies of EU member states in the context of broader post-colonial relationships and ideas. Her particular interests are in pro-asylum advocacy networks and activists, the politics of selective urban surveillance of undocumented rejected asylum seekers, and networks of 'cities of sanctuary', as well as resistance to deterrence-based measures of destitution, detention and forced deportation. Her regional focus is on the countries of the Great Lakes region, especially Rwanda and Eastern DRC, and the relations of francophone Africa with EU member states. She works on peace-building, including through music and the arts, in Rwanda and the wider region.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Access limited to authorized users.
Source of Description
Online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed December 29, 2022).
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Print version: 9783031098901
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Table of Contents
Part I: The Politics of Art: All at Sea
Chapter 1: Introduction: Diving In
Chapter 2: Two Artists and the Tides
Chapter 3: Decolonising Contemporary Art? Collage+
Part II: Drowning and Waving
Chapter 4: Fluidity, Death, Denial: The Rwanda Genocide
Chapter 5: Death and the Mediterranean
Chapter 6: Undocumented Peoples Self-Advocacy: Between Drowning and Dreaming
Part III: Back to Sea: Imperial Sunsets
Chapter 7: Fear of Flooding: Convivial Racism in The Netherlands
Chapter 8: HMS UK Hits the Rocks
Chapter 9: Concluding Notes: Flotsam and Jetsam.
Chapter 1: Introduction: Diving In
Chapter 2: Two Artists and the Tides
Chapter 3: Decolonising Contemporary Art? Collage+
Part II: Drowning and Waving
Chapter 4: Fluidity, Death, Denial: The Rwanda Genocide
Chapter 5: Death and the Mediterranean
Chapter 6: Undocumented Peoples Self-Advocacy: Between Drowning and Dreaming
Part III: Back to Sea: Imperial Sunsets
Chapter 7: Fear of Flooding: Convivial Racism in The Netherlands
Chapter 8: HMS UK Hits the Rocks
Chapter 9: Concluding Notes: Flotsam and Jetsam.