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What Comes to Matter as Border: On Parisian Borderness Dynamics

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  • Lola Aubry

Abstract

Even though it is now established within the field of border studies that bordering experiences vary depending on who you are, a less investigated problem has to do with how differentially border-ed/ing realities and knowledges relate, emerge, and matter. Therefore, this paper unpacks, in dialog with feminist sciences studies, what Sarah Green calls “borderness dynamics” as a cosmos-politics, a complicating ecology of situated knowledges on and of border(ing)s. The argument builds on an ethnographic investigation of the processes through which initially “borderless” White European volunteers from pro-refugee initiatives in Paris come to sense and know borders in the city as they encounter other border-ed/ing versions of Paris through their practices. The paper demonstrates how these shifts in volunteers’ border sensibilities and knowledges matter ethically and ontologically. The shifts in their (not)knowing/sensing, animated by processes of complication, multiplication, and texturization, contribute to re-shaping what comes to matter as border, as well as to de-re-territorializing the city and its inhabitants as a borderland and as borderlanders. Attending to borderness dynamics enables one to map encounter-induced positionality changes that contribute to “rescaping” at once borders, borderlands, and borderlanders.

Suggested Citation

  • Lola Aubry, 2024. "What Comes to Matter as Border: On Parisian Borderness Dynamics," Journal of Borderlands Studies, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 39(3), pages 455-474, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:rjbsxx:v:39:y:2024:i:3:p:455-474
    DOI: 10.1080/08865655.2022.2129426
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