Walls and Islands:Exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology
The chapter "Walls and Islands" critically engages with the deployment of two distinctly spatial and perpetuating manifestations of carcerality: the wall and the island. Our inquiry combines our respective scholarly positions in architecture and anthropology as we swap and share disciplina...
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ftreadpublicatio:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/fd40662c-01c3-45b3-a41e-29ff77458851 2023-09-05T13:22:04+02:00 Walls and Islands:Exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology Johannessen, Runa Martin, Tomas Max 2021 https://adk.elsevierpure.com/da/publications/fd40662c-01c3-45b3-a41e-29ff77458851 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Johannessen , R & Martin , T M 2021 , Walls and Islands : Exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology . in Architectural Anthropology : Exploring Lived Space . architectural anthropology walls islands carceral space prison Deportation center Nuuk Lindholm /dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/artisticdevelopment/no No bookPart 2021 ftreadpublicatio 2023-08-11T06:21:39Z The chapter "Walls and Islands" critically engages with the deployment of two distinctly spatial and perpetuating manifestations of carcerality: the wall and the island. Our inquiry combines our respective scholarly positions in architecture and anthropology as we swap and share disciplinary archetypes in the anthropology of walls and the architecture of islands. The exploration takes its point of departure in, on the one hand, the realization of a prison wall around the new correctional facility Anstalten in Nuuk – Greenland’s first ever encounter with ultramodern perimeter security; and, on the other hand, the highly charged proposal for establishing a deportation centre on the small island of Lindholm in Denmark – fuelling affective public debates about immigrant threats and instantiating age-old discourses of quarantine and intentional harm. The two cases illuminate a dilemma with architectural and anthropological consequences: how state power simultaneously seek to manage deviance and produce normality through spatial protocols that keep people apart. Book Part Nuuk Architecture, Design and Conservation - Danish Portal for Artistic and Scientific Research: Research Outputs Nuuk ENVELOPE(-52.150,-52.150,68.717,68.717) |
institution |
Open Polar |
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Architecture, Design and Conservation - Danish Portal for Artistic and Scientific Research: Research Outputs |
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ftreadpublicatio |
language |
English |
topic |
architectural anthropology walls islands carceral space prison Deportation center Nuuk Lindholm /dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/artisticdevelopment/no No |
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architectural anthropology walls islands carceral space prison Deportation center Nuuk Lindholm /dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/artisticdevelopment/no No Johannessen, Runa Martin, Tomas Max Walls and Islands:Exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology |
topic_facet |
architectural anthropology walls islands carceral space prison Deportation center Nuuk Lindholm /dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/artisticdevelopment/no No |
description |
The chapter "Walls and Islands" critically engages with the deployment of two distinctly spatial and perpetuating manifestations of carcerality: the wall and the island. Our inquiry combines our respective scholarly positions in architecture and anthropology as we swap and share disciplinary archetypes in the anthropology of walls and the architecture of islands. The exploration takes its point of departure in, on the one hand, the realization of a prison wall around the new correctional facility Anstalten in Nuuk – Greenland’s first ever encounter with ultramodern perimeter security; and, on the other hand, the highly charged proposal for establishing a deportation centre on the small island of Lindholm in Denmark – fuelling affective public debates about immigrant threats and instantiating age-old discourses of quarantine and intentional harm. The two cases illuminate a dilemma with architectural and anthropological consequences: how state power simultaneously seek to manage deviance and produce normality through spatial protocols that keep people apart. |
format |
Book Part |
author |
Johannessen, Runa Martin, Tomas Max |
author_facet |
Johannessen, Runa Martin, Tomas Max |
author_sort |
Johannessen, Runa |
title |
Walls and Islands:Exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology |
title_short |
Walls and Islands:Exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology |
title_full |
Walls and Islands:Exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology |
title_fullStr |
Walls and Islands:Exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology |
title_full_unstemmed |
Walls and Islands:Exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology |
title_sort |
walls and islands:exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
https://adk.elsevierpure.com/da/publications/fd40662c-01c3-45b3-a41e-29ff77458851 |
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ENVELOPE(-52.150,-52.150,68.717,68.717) |
geographic |
Nuuk |
geographic_facet |
Nuuk |
genre |
Nuuk |
genre_facet |
Nuuk |
op_source |
Johannessen , R & Martin , T M 2021 , Walls and Islands : Exploring perpetual configurations of carcerality through architectural anthropology . in Architectural Anthropology : Exploring Lived Space . |
op_rights |
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess |
_version_ |
1776202592609632256 |