Abstract (may include machine translation)
Nationale und regionale Identitäten und Lebenswelten erscheinen uns oft naturgegeben. Doch unsere kartographierte Welt ist geprägt durch die Kolonialgeschichte, durch Ausgrenzung und die Sicherung von Privilegien. Braucht eine offene Gesellschaft auch offene Grenzen? Oder muss sie im Gegenteil ihre Abgrenzung umso entschiedener durchsetzen, je offener sie sein möchte? Die Sozialanthropologin Shalini Randeria und der Ethnologe Wolfgang Kaschuba zeichnen in ihrem Dialog die "Verflechtungsgeschichte" der Moderne und ihre Ordnungskonzepte nach.
National and regional identities and living environments often seem natural to us. But our mapped world is shaped by colonial history, exclusion and the securing of privileges. Does an open society also need open borders? Or, on the contrary, does it need to enforce its boundaries all the more resolutely the more open it wants to be? In their dialog, social anthropologist Shalini Randeria and ethnologist Wolfgang Kaschuba trace the "entanglement history" of modernity and its concepts of order.
National and regional identities and living environments often seem natural to us. But our mapped world is shaped by colonial history, exclusion and the securing of privileges. Does an open society also need open borders? Or, on the contrary, does it need to enforce its boundaries all the more resolutely the more open it wants to be? In their dialog, social anthropologist Shalini Randeria and ethnologist Wolfgang Kaschuba trace the "entanglement history" of modernity and its concepts of order.
Translated title of the contribution | Boundless (Dis-)Order - Mobility and Borders in Transition? |
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Original language | English |
Place of Publication | Berlin |
Publisher | Nicolai Berlin |
Number of pages | 80 |
ISBN (Print) | 9783964763020, 3964763020 |
State | Published - 2019 |
Publication series
Name | Berliner Korrespondenzen |
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