Neue Buch-Veröffentlichung – Resituating Crisis

pub Lola

Neue Buch-Veröffentlichung – Resituating Crisis

Catégorie d'actualité
Mitteilung
Date de début

Die Herausgeberinnen Lola Aubry (UniGR-CBS) und Dorte Jagetic Andersen (Centre for Border Region Studies) führen in ihrem neu erschienenen Buch 14 Beiträge zusammen, die aktuelle Krisen und ihre Diskurse ethnographisch untersuchen und kritisch analysieren.

Der Band bringt Anthropolog:innen, Geograph:innen und Kulturwissenschaftler:innen zusammen und bietet Einblicke in verschiedene Krisenverständnisse und gelebte Krisenerfahrungen. Darüber hinaus wird untersucht, wie auf Krisen reagiert werden kann, darunter künstlerische Ausdrucksformen, politische Bewegungen, ehrenamtliches Engagement und alltägliche Formen der Resilienz.

Zu den Autor:innen zählen Grenzforschende, die sich in ihren Beiträgen Grenzen und Grenzräume als Orte der Krise sowie die Krise des europäischen Grenzregimes untersuchen und auf gelebten Krisenerfahrungen von Bewohner:innen in Grenzräumen eingehen.

Das UniGR-CBS hat mit der Mitherausgeberin Lola Aubry über die Veröffentlichung des neuen Buches gesprochen (Austausch auf Englisch).

Together with D. J. Andersen, you have published an anthology on a highly topical subject. What new perspectives on crises does the book open up?

I would identify three main perspectives. First, the anthology adopts a nuanced approach to crises. It goes further than saying that they are destructive and negative. It explores their transformative and critique-inducing potential and examines how individuals and communities integrate both widespread and everyday forms of crisis into their practices. This sheds light on the resilience, adaptability, and creativity of individuals and groups navigating crises.

Second, the book investigates situations where crisis becomes an integral part of normality itself. While the media and politicians often depict crises—such as violent conflicts, pandemics, or forced migration—as disruptions of normality, this anthology delves into what it means to live in a reality where crisis does not merely distort normality but becomes a normalized part of it.

Last but not least, the overall idea of the book is to emphasize the importance of everyday life and situated knowledges in understanding crisis, conceptualizing crisis, and critiquing mediatic crisis discourses. We argue that an ethnographic perspective is essential to move beyond one-sided and pre-established ideas of crisis. By situating crisis discourses in specific contexts, the book enables an understanding of crises as lived, performed—sometimes in contradictory ways—, and mitigated. As Olivier Kramsch aptly notes in his afterword, the book "spatializes" crisis, re-embedding it into specific spaces and places.

 

Many of the authors' contributions discuss crises in relation to borders and migration. Is there a particular relationship?

Absolutely. Several contributions critically engage with the idea of the so-called migration crisis, as framed by media and political debates. Others examine borders in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, showcasing the value of approaching crises from the perspective of borders, which helps to resituate the geopolitical in the everyday. This focus reflects the expertise of many contributors in border studies.

At the same time, the chapters extend well beyond borders and migration, addressing crises related to gender, belonging, citizenship, and other themes. These diverse contexts enrich our understanding of how crises unfold and are lived. Importantly, the anthology challenges the focus on highly visible, mediatized crises, encouraging us to consider crises in broader, situated, less conventional, and more ordinary ways.

 

You have mobilized authors from various disciplines for your anthology. What added value does the interdisciplinary discussion of crises provide?

By drawing on disciplines such as anthropology, geography, and cultural studies, the volume examines a wide range of practices related to crises, including artistic expressions, political movements, volunteering, and everyday forms of resilience.

At the same time, each disciplinary perspective uniquely contributes to achieving two central objectives of the book: a critical examination of crisis discourses and a nuanced exploration of the lived experiences of crises. In other words, the anthology offers a variety of conceptual approaches to crises, compelling arguments for rethinking them, and empirical insights that examine specific crises from critical, decentered and often unexpected angles.

 

You can read the introduction here for free

 

cover


Bibliographische Angaben

Dorte Jagetic Andersen und Lola Aubry (Hg.) (2025): Resituating Crisis. Silencing and Voicing Crisis in Everyday Life. New York, Berghahn, DOI: 10.3167/9781805398257.
Weitere Informationen