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  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID162412
Title ProperAudializing migrant bodies
Other Title Informationsound and security at the border
LanguageENG
AuthorWeitzel, Michelle D
Summary / Abstract (Note)Sound represents a salient yet rarely examined counterpoint to visuality and materiality in security, international bordering, and mobility literature. Using the context of sub-Saharan African migration as grounding for empirical analysis and drawing on fieldwork conducted in Morocco in 2015 and 2016, this article lays the foundation for a research agenda that understands voice, and the sonic body more broadly, as mechanisms of political power. In examining the central roles that sound, hearing, and voice play in strategies of individual resistance at border crossings, as well as in state, private, and transnational communication and surveillance regimes, it attends to the ways in which sound and the audialized body reconfigure power relations, and structure mobility and personal identity. This analysis contributes to the growing literature addressing biometric borders and the deterritorialization of security practices, and argues that sound, along with more familiar nodes of securitization, constitutes a critical site of governmentality and therefore of ethical and moral negotiation.
`In' analytical NoteSecurity Dialogue Vol. 49, No.6; Dec 2018:, p.421-437
Journal SourceSecurity Dialogue Vol: 49 No 6
Key WordsMigration ;  Power ;  Border Security ;  Biometrics ;  Sound ;  Embodiment


 
 
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