Issue #43 A Refugee Protest Camp in Vienna And the European Union’s Processes of Racialization, Seclusion, and Discrimination

A Refugee Protest Camp in Vienna And the European Union’s Processes of Racialization, Seclusion, and Discrimination

Marina Gržinić

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Issue #43
March 2013










Notes
1

See .

2

Achille Mbembe, Sortir de la grande nuit. Essai sur l’Afrique décolonisée (We must get out of the great night: Essay on decolonized Africa) (Paris: Découverte, 2010), 171.

3

This began when refugees pitched a small tent in Würzburg. It has since grown into a huge movement that has spread all over Europe. See.

4

Jacques Rancière, “Who is the Subject of the Rights of Man?” South Atlantic Quarterly Vol. 103, No. 2/3, (2004) 297–310.

5

In her text “French Suburbia 2005: The Return of the Political Unrecognized,” Rada Iveković writes: “When the (French) government reactivated the law about the state of emergency (in 2005), passed during the Algerian war in 1955, the French learned that colonial legislation had never been abrogated in the first place.” Rada Iveković, “French Suburbia 2005,” in New Feminism: Worlds of Feminism, Queer and networking Conditions, ed. M. Gržinić and R. Reitsamer, Vienna: Löcker, 2008.

6

Suvendrini Perera, “What is a Camp…?”, e-borderlands Vol. 1, No. 1 (2002). See .

7

Achille Mbembe, “Theory from the Antipodes: Notes on Jean & John Comaroffs’ TFS,” in Theorizing the Contemporary (2012).

8

See my research conducted with Šefik Tatlić: Marina Gržinić and Šefik Tatlić, “Global Capitalism’s Racializations,” 2011, . In the following, I will reuse parts of this research.

9

Achille Mbembe, On the Postcolony (Berkley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2001), 13.

10

Ibid.