The ongoing EU “refugee crisis” is drawing public attention on the brutal forces of war, persecution and exploitation, which are at the origin of contemporary displacements. However, the humanitarian governance of forced migration is now more than ever embedded in the construction of powerful moral imaginaries, which tend to depict “real refugees” as speechless and passive subjects, substantially devoid of wills, personal aspirations or desires. In an attempt to contrast the pervasive de-politicisation of forced migrants’ life trajectories, this article sheds light on the role of intimacy - in the shaping of the struggle for freedom and mobility, as well as of claims to the right to settle. Drawing on the ethnographic account of the experiences of an Iranian refugee encountered during my fieldwork in Bologna (Italy) in 2011, I show how affective relationships - experienced or sought, existing or missing - can play a crucial role in imagining and concretely enacting the flight from oppressive regimes, as well as in taking the decision to settle in a specific national context. Through an analysis of the transformative nature of intimate relationships, this paper underscores the multiple connections between political subjectivity and affectivity in forced migrants’ life paths.
Sull'intreccio tra soggettività politiche e relazioni affettive nel percorso di vita dei rifugiati / Giudici, D.. - In: STUDI EMIGRAZIONE. - ISSN 0039-2936. - 55:212(2018), pp. 513-529.
Sull'intreccio tra soggettività politiche e relazioni affettive nel percorso di vita dei rifugiati
Giudici D.
2018-01-01
Abstract
The ongoing EU “refugee crisis” is drawing public attention on the brutal forces of war, persecution and exploitation, which are at the origin of contemporary displacements. However, the humanitarian governance of forced migration is now more than ever embedded in the construction of powerful moral imaginaries, which tend to depict “real refugees” as speechless and passive subjects, substantially devoid of wills, personal aspirations or desires. In an attempt to contrast the pervasive de-politicisation of forced migrants’ life trajectories, this article sheds light on the role of intimacy - in the shaping of the struggle for freedom and mobility, as well as of claims to the right to settle. Drawing on the ethnographic account of the experiences of an Iranian refugee encountered during my fieldwork in Bologna (Italy) in 2011, I show how affective relationships - experienced or sought, existing or missing - can play a crucial role in imagining and concretely enacting the flight from oppressive regimes, as well as in taking the decision to settle in a specific national context. Through an analysis of the transformative nature of intimate relationships, this paper underscores the multiple connections between political subjectivity and affectivity in forced migrants’ life paths.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione