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ID184134
Title ProperSeized
Other Title InformationPerformance Autoethnography in the UK Border Force National Museum
LanguageENG
AuthorRowe, Cami
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines representations of border security within public museums, through the example of the UK Border Force National Museum. It begins by discussing the way that international borders are theatrically experienced, and the parallel characteristics of museum spaces. I then suggest the value of performance autoethnography when analysing such phenomena, which arises from the ability to creatively situate personal experience alongside institutional scripts of border control. The article then presents a performance autoethnography that illustrates my experiences within the Border Force Museum. This provides new insights into the theatrical framing of the museum and its effect on visitor interpretations. The article demonstrates that the Border Force Museum replicates the theatricality of border control sites, and thus supports the ordering of bodies into insiders and outsiders; however, creative methods for knowledge production might offer a means of challenging existing border taxonomies, especially when personal experience is circulated through theatrical means.
`In' analytical NoteMillennium: Journal of International Studies Vol. 50, No.2; Jan 2022: p.379-404
Journal SourceMillennium: Journal of International Studies 2022-04 50, 2
Key WordsMigration ;  Borders ;  Performance ;  Autoethnography ;  Museums ;  Theatricality