Circulating
Circulating
Migrating, moving, transporting, trading, intersecting, crossing, sharing, bordering, queering
Railways, markets, borders, music halls, spiritual spaces, solidarities
Circulating, whether enforced or intended, evokes a multiplicity of spaces, identities and capital flows. It points to spatial entanglements across vast geographies in the service of extractive (colonial) capitalism, and in the form of solidarities and practices of resistance. It speaks of the effort and ingenuity involved in undertaking a journey and the heightening of borders and controls that hinder and impede this movement. In this multiplicity, race is at times destabilised, reinforced and re-imagined. Containers, ports, borders and passports are associated with new practices of empire building, and colonial and neo-colonial violence acted out on racialised bodies. In circulating, the hardships and immense effort of journeys involving multiple displacements do not exclude collective affirmation and solidarity.
Film/ Fiction/ Visualisations
Patel, Shailja. 2010. Migritude [Performance]. New York: Khaya Press.
Diop Mambéty, Djibril. 1973. Touki Bouki [Film]. Senegal.
Diop, Mati. 2013. Milles Soleils [Film]. Senegal/ France.
Chimurenga Chronic. 2018. “The African Imagination of a Borderless World.” [Mappings].
Core Texts
More Reading
Gilroy, Paul. 1993. The Black Atlantic. Boston: Harvard University Press.
Gunaratnam, Yasmin. 2013. Death and the Migrant: Bodies, Borders and Care. London: Bloomsbury Press.
Kihato, Caroline Wanjiku. 2013. Migrant Women of Johannesburg. Johannesburg: Wits University Press.
MacGaffey, Janet and Bazenguissa-Ganga, Remy. 2000. Congo - Paris: Transnational Traders on the Margins of the Law. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
McKittrick, Katherine and Weheliye, Alexander. 2017. “808s & Heartbreak.” Propter. 2:1, 13 – 42.
Simone, AbdouMaliq. 2004.“People as Infrastructure.” Public Culture, 16, 407 – 429.
Teriba, Adedoyin. 2012. “Using Notions of Beauty to Remember and Be Known in the Bight of Benin and Its Hinterland,” Pidgin Magazine. 11, 246 - 255.