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Lande: The Calais 'Jungle' and Beyond

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Available Open Access under CC-BY-NC licence. How can Archaeology help us understand our contemporary world? This ground-breaking book reflects on material, visual and digital culture from the Cala...
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  • 22 June 2019
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Available Open Access under CC-BY-NC licence.

How can Archaeology help us understand our contemporary world? 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, the book argues that an anthropological focus on duration, impermanence and traces of the most recent past can recentre the ongoing human experiences of displacement in Europe today.

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Price: $74.95
Pages: 154
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Bristol University Press
Publication Date: 22 June 2019
ISBN: 9781529206180
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration, Sociology, Migration, immigration and emigration
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Dan Hicks is Professor of Contemporary Archaeology at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of St Cross College, Oxford. Dan’s research combines Archaeology and Anthropology to study the modern and contemporary world through material and visual culture, from museum collections to landscapes and ‘heritage’.

Sarah Mallet is Postdoctoral Researcher and TORCH Research Fellow in the School of Archaeology at the University of Oxford, and co-curator for the Pitt Rivers Museum exhibition LANDE: the Calais ‘Jungle’ and Beyond.

Preface

Introduction: borderline archaeology

Environmental hostility

Temporal violence

Visual politics

Giving time