Skateboarding in the empty city: a radical archive of alternative pandemic mobilities
In: Mobilities, Band 18, Heft 5, S. 821-838
ISSN: 1745-011X
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In: Mobilities, Band 18, Heft 5, S. 821-838
ISSN: 1745-011X
In: Modern Asian studies, Band 56, Heft 2, S. 691-714
ISSN: 1469-8099
AbstractThis article focuses on cross-border medical connections between Myanmar and Manipur, India. Non-state actors have been instrumental in creating the networks to bring bodies and body parts back and forth, first bypassing, then enmeshing, state actors. I focus on the movement of patients and medical samples across the border—from western Myanmar to Imphal city and back again—and the health infrastructure that enables it. Analysing these connections makes several contributions to the study of border governance. First, movement from Myanmar to Manipur is primarily for treatment or diagnosis, and these connections project particular ways of thinking about each place—western Myanmar as poor and remote, Manipur as advanced and networked. Second, both Manipur and western Myanmar can be considered in 'transition'—as territories being recalibrated by political dynamics emanating elsewhere yet becoming connected through shared needs. Third, patients and samples move through territories controlled by paramilitary forces, underground groups, and different tribal councils. Routes are sometimes blocked or passage treacherous, testing the limits of conventional notions of bilateral border governance. Finally, cross-border medical connections between Manipur and Myanmar draw attention to the risky cross-border medical mobility of the poor. Rather than seeking to minimize cost, patients utilize Manipur's health infrastructure out of necessity, providing insights into the contours of cross-border medical care in times of transition.
In: Space and Culture, Band 26, Heft 1, S. 89-102
ISSN: 1552-8308
This article explores the centrality of China's cities to skate video; the most popular form for capturing, circulating, and consuming skateboarding. China's urban growth produces endless spots to skate; a spot is assemblage of objects and surfaces that offer the opportunity to perform skateboarding maneuvers (tricks). Skate video is the substance of skate culture, the once quintessentially Californian pastime turned global subculture and industry. After skateboarding left the skatepark for the streets in the 1990s, and once video became easier to circulate digitally through streaming platforms in the mid-2000s, the search for spots to perform and capture unsanctioned street skateboarding spread to China's urban landscapes, beginning with Shenzhen. China's cities are sites of global desire among skateboarders for the perfect surfaces and obstacles created in the built environment and the speed at which they are produced. Using skate video as an archive I make four arguments. First, China's cities imputed with a mythical character; endless spots produced with miraculous speed. Second, skate videos re-map China's cities through the skater's gaze, a form of urban knowledge both unique and widely shared. Third, the search for spots indexes urban development in China, privileging the recent and shunning the past. Fourth, skateboarding in China's cities create spaces for inter-cultural encounter between skateboarders and authority, the public and other skateboarders. The article concludes by discussing the utility of skate video as an alternative visual archive of urban China for foreign audiences and increasingly for skate communities in China itself.
In: Contributions to Indian sociology, Band 53, Heft 3, S. 444-446
ISSN: 0973-0648
In: Journal of borderlands studies, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 81-94
ISSN: 2159-1229
In: The journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 434-435
ISSN: 1467-9655
In: Asian studies review, Band 37, Heft 1, S. 119-120
ISSN: 1467-8403
In: Asian studies review, Band 36, Heft 4, S. 593-594
ISSN: 1467-8403
In: Global change, peace & security, Band 24, Heft 1, S. 165-182
ISSN: 1478-1166
In: Men and masculinities, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 112-131
ISSN: 1552-6828
In this article, the author examines the challenges to masculinity prompted by migration from the Northeast frontier of India to the capital city Delhi. Northeast India has been characterized by insurgency, counterinsurgency, and ethno-nationalism since Indian Independence in 1947. In this militarized environment, masculinity has been shaped by historical constructions of a warrior past fused with contemporary constructions based on ethno-nationalism and armed struggle. A dramatic increase in migration out of the region by young men and women to the urban centers of India to work in the retail and call center industries poses a major challenge as it ruptures the masculine norms of home. In response, men attempt to enforce these masculine norms with varied results. At the same time, new expressions of masculinity are evolving alongside conventional expressions demonstrating the fluidity of masculinity even among men from a region where masculine norms appear rigid.
In: Contemporary South Asia, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 255-270
ISSN: 1469-364X
In: Contemporary South Asia, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 313-330
ISSN: 1469-364X
In: Journal of South Asian Development, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 185-210
ISSN: 0973-1733
Although scholarly interest in Northeast India is growing there is still relatively little discussion of the high levels of poverty in the region and the failures of development. When mentioned they are viewed instrumentally as causes and/or symptoms of ongoing insurgency and counter-insurgency. However this does not fully explain how a region that receives an extraordinarily large amount of development funding from the Indian Government, has its own development ministry, has some of India's highest human development indicators, and has an array of institutional layers assuring autonomy and decentralisation has poverty levels well above the Indian national average. Using the state of Meghalaya, this article examines the factors underpinning the development agenda in the region and the political space for contesting this agenda. The argument presented is three-fold; the regional development agenda is underpinned by national security imperatives which characterise relations between the various levels of governance ensuring minimal deviation, contestation of the development agenda is limited by national security from above and ethno-nationalism from below narrowing the political space for negotiating development alternatives, and this situation is the result of material and ideational factors embedding development in the politics of state-formation and ethnic identity.
In: Contemporary South Asia, Band 15, Heft 1, S. 35-53
ISSN: 1469-364X
In: Contemporary South Asia, Band 15, Heft 1, S. 35-53
ISSN: 0958-4935
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