2020
Communicating temporalities: The Orientalist unconscious, the European migrant crisis, and the time of the Other
DOBOŠ, PavelBasic information
Original name
Communicating temporalities: The Orientalist unconscious, the European migrant crisis, and the time of the Other
Authors
DOBOŠ, Pavel (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution)
Edition
Political Geography, Oxford, Elsevier, 2020, 0962-6298
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Article in a journal
Field of Study
50701 Cultural and economic geography
Country of publisher
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
References:
Impact factor
Impact factor: 3.660
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14310/20:00115419
Organization unit
Faculty of Science
UT WoS
000539371200003
EID Scopus
2-s2.0-85080052101
Keywords in English
Orientalism; imaginative geographies; chronopolitics; temporality; migrant crisis; Czech Republic; communication geography; Facebook
Tags
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Changed: 2/11/2020 08:56, Mgr. Marie Novosadová Šípková, DiS.
Abstract
In the original language
The paper analyses communication about the European migrant crisis in East-Central Europe, particularly in the Czech Republic, as it was happening on the Facebook platform. In discussions amongst Czechs, the collective Orientalist unconscious shapes what imaginative geographies are communicated, and how. The paper argues for a coupling of the critique of Orientalist imaginative geographies and Deleuzean critique of the pointillistic chronological time. Both, imaginative geographies and the chronological time, acknowledge difference only as the difference from the Same. In the analysed communication, imaginative geographies draw on several notions of temporality that depend on the chronological time. These are the single timeline of progress, tunnels of time, movement towards apocalypse, and repetition of the past. They transform African and Middle-Eastern imaginative geographies and understandings of people migrating from these spaces. They also compose an imaginative geography of Western Europe which collapses under the surge of migrants. It provokes an irreconcilableness between the anti-immigration and pro-migration attitudes of discussants as it leads to emplacing the other attitudinal side in the past time. Therefore, the paper calls for an ethics of the event and the need to acknowledge the heterogeneity of diverse temporalities and accidentality of a present event.
Links
MUNI/A/1356/2019, interní kód MU |
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