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ID089210
Title ProperTravel as an analytic of exclusion
Other Title Informationbecoming noncitizens, and the politics of mobility after the Berlin wall
LanguageENG
AuthorPartridge, Damani James
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines the ways in which travel serves as an analytic to understand citizenship and the production of noncitizens after the Berlin Wall. This production is linked to a shift in the post-Wall German and European discourses and practices of asylum, which are significantly renegotiated and restricted shortly after the Wall falls. It is not only the law that changes, but also the mobility of the subjects perceived not to belong. The production of non-citizens is also related to official and unofficial articulations that attach Germanness to "Whiteness." "Black" subjects must not only negotiate their citizenship via real histories of mobility and displacement but also because their skin itself signifies travel and adventure. In the end, I write about the space that this imagination of travel and adventure through "Black" bodies both opens up and closes off for a politics based on "Blackness." I turn from normative accounts to the voices and bodies of "Black" subjects themselves.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 16, No. 3; May-June 2009: p342-366
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 16, No. 3; May-June 2009: p342-366
Key WordsBlackness ;  Post - Socialism - Germany ;  Travel - Germany ;  Citizenship - Germany