- School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications
School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications
Permanent URI for this collection
5 results
Filters
Reset filtersSettings
Statistics
Citations
Search Results
Now showing
1 - 5 of 5
-
ItemThe Invasion Complex: Deep Historical Fears and Wide Open AnxietiesPAPASTERGIADIS, N ; Petrilli, S (Meltemi Editore, 2007)
-
ItemWars of MobilityPapastergiadis, N (SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2010-08)In the aftermath of 9/11, world leaders addressed the nation as a body under threat and hastened in new policies to bolster border protection and ‘securitize’ immigration. While the terrorist attacks cast new forms of public attention on the risks posed by mobile agents, the link between national security and regulating migration has always been at the forefront of the constitution of the nation state. Despite this persistent anxiety towards the social impact of migration and the status of people on the move, a more general understanding of mobility is not only missing in public debates, but has been a lacunae in the social sciences. What is mobility — a state, a force, a set of shifting co-ordinates? How does the definition of mobility shape social attitudes and personal experiences? This article examines the use of organic and mechanistic metaphors that have underpinned the classical paradigm for understanding of mobility in the social sciences. It argues that the global patterns of migration and the contemporary forms of hybrid subjectivity do not fit well with this paradigm. The limits and kinetophobic associations generated by the classical paradigm are examined through Harald Kleinschmidt’s theory of residentialism. The final part of this article outlines an alternative conceptual frame that is based on key terms from complexity theory.
-
ItemWhat Is the South?Papastergiadis, N (SAGE Publications, 2010-02)The idea of the South has a long history. In the recent past it has been revived as a possible frame for representing the cultural context of not just regions that are geographically located in the South, but also those that share a common post-colonial heritage. In this essay I explore the affinities and tensions between the South and parallel terms such as Third World and Antipodes. I argue that the South can extend the existing debates on cross-cultural exchange, and provide a useful perspective for representing what I call a ‘spherical consciousness’ in contemporary art.
-
ItemDivisionPAPASTERGIADIS, N. (Oxford University Press, 2006)
-
ItemGlimpses of Cosmopolitanism in the Hospitality of ArtPAPASTERGIADIS, N. ( 2007)