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Lande : The Calais 'Jungle' and Beyond - Dan Hicks

Lande

The Calais 'Jungle' and Beyond

By: Dan Hicks, Sarah Mallet

Hardcover | 22 May 2019 | Edition Number 1

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This ground-breaking book reflects on material, visual and digital culture from the Calais Jungle&;the informal camp where, before its destruction in October 2016, more than 10,000 displaced people lived. Lande: The Calais 'Jungle' and Beyond reassesses how we understand crisis, activism, and the infrastructure of national borders in Refugee and Forced Migration Studies, foregrounding the politics of environments, time, and the ongoing legacies of empire. Introducing a major collaborative exhibit at Oxford&;s Pitt Rivers Museum, this book argues that an anthropological focus on duration, impermanence, and traces of the most recent past can recenter the ongoing human experiences of displacement in Europe today.
Industry Reviews
"Shocking, stunning, sobering. Lande: The Calais 'Jungle' and Beyond forces us to ask who we are, what we'd do in the shoes of others, and whether we can continue to look away from what Calais has become." Danny Dorling, University of Oxford
"This deeply informed, richly illustrated and politically engaged book describes border camps as hostile environments in which humans resist impermanence by their relations to objects." Frederic Keck, CNRS and Laboratoire d'anthropologie sociale
"An unsettling work of border archaeology that documents how a war of things (tents, shoes, and flowerpots) is really about who gets to be human." Shannon Lee Dawdy, University of Chicago
"Through drawings, photographs, objects and audio recordings-most of them borrowed from volunteers who worked in the camp-they have turned a political irritation into a powerful human drama about cruelty and kindness... Migrants fleeing poverty and war is one of Europe's biggest political challenges. As this exhibition shows, how Europeans decide to treat them is a profound moral test, too." The Economist
"For Hicks and Mallet, the Jungle was not an event, not something that existed in a single time and place, but part of a process - one that is not over. In fact, it may be only just beginning." The Guardian.

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