Sarah Green
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Lines, traces, and tidemarks
Further reflections on forms of border
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If borders mark differences, they do not all do so in the same way. While this proposition has been studied from a range of angles, this topic has rarely focused on the forms that borders take, both in material and in conceptual terms. Most often, borders are imagined as lines, or entities related to lines: walls, barriers, fences, perimeters. Lines evoke a sense of two sides, and, of course, that has been critiqued by scholars who prefer to think in terms of rhizomes, webs, fractals, or networks. Using the ideas of lines, traces, and tidemarks, this contribution embarks on a conversation about the diverse qualities of borders, or what could be called ‘border-ness’.

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The political materialities of borders

New theoretical directions

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