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Mapping Deathscapes: Digital Geographies of Racial and Border Violence [Hardback]

Edited by (Curtin University, Australia), Edited by
  • Formāts: Hardback, 270 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 544 g, 22 Halftones, black and white; 22 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Routledge Research in Digital Humanities
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Dec-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032056576
  • ISBN-13: 9781032056579
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  • Hardback
  • Cena: 191,26 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 270 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 544 g, 22 Halftones, black and white; 22 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Routledge Research in Digital Humanities
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Dec-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032056576
  • ISBN-13: 9781032056579
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
"This volume offers a critical and creative analysis of the innovations of Deathscapes, a transnational digital humanities project that maps the sites and distributions of custodial deaths in locations such as police cells, prisons and immigration detention centres. An international team of authors take a multidisciplinary approach to questions of race, geographies of state violence and countermaps of resistance across North America, Australia and Europe. The book establishes rich lines of dialogic connection between digital and other media by incorporating both traditional scholarly resources and digital archives, databases, social media. Chapters offer a comprehensive mapping of the key attributes through which racial violence is addressed and contested through digital media and articulate, in the process, the distinctive dimensions of the Deathscapes site. This interdisciplinary volume will be an important resource for scholars, students and activists working in the areas of Cultural Studies, Media and Visual Studies, Indigenous Studies, Refugee Studies and Law"--

This volume offers a critical and creative analysis of the innovations of Deathscapes, a transnational digital humanities project that maps the sites and distributions of custodial deaths in locations such as police cells, prisons and immigration detention centres.



This volume offers a critical and creative analysis of the innovations of Deathscapes, a transnational digital humanities project that maps the sites and distributions of custodial deaths in locations such as police cells, prisons and immigration detention centres.

An international team of authors take a multidisciplinary approach to questions of race, geographies of state violence and countermaps of resistance across North America, Australia and Europe. The book establishes rich lines of dialogic connection between digital and other media by incorporating both traditional scholarly resources and digital archives, databases and social media. Chapters offer a comprehensive mapping of the key attributes through which racial violence is addressed and contested through digital media and articulate, in the process, the distinctive dimensions of the Deathscapes site.

This interdisciplinary volume will be an important resource for scholars, students and activists working in the areas of Cultural Studies, Media and Visual Studies, Indigenous Studies, Refugee Studies and Law.

List of figures
ix
Acknowledgements xiii
List of contributors
xv
Introduction: Mapping Dcathscapes 1(22)
Suvendrini Perera
Joseph Pugliese
Michelle Bui
Pilar Kasat
Ayman Qwaider
Raed Yacoub
PART I Deathscapes intersectionalities
23(56)
Overview
24(3)
Suvendrini Perera
Joseph Pugliese
1 Violence and intersecting power relations
27(19)
Patricia Hill Collins
2 The colonial debtscape
46(16)
Maria Gi Annacopoulos
3 "You have to pay with your body": sexual violence, border violence and the settler state
62(17)
Suvendrini Perera
Joseph Pugliese
PART II Making Indigenous women visible in the deathscape
79(50)
Overview
80(4)
Suvendrini Perera
Joseph Pugliese
4 Data silence in the settler archive: Indigenous femicide, deathscapes and social media
84(22)
Bronwyn Carlson
5 "Say her name": naming Aboriginal women in the justice system
106(21)
Hannah Mcglade
Stella Tarrant
6 Close the Inquest
127(2)
Alison Whittaker
PART III Refugees in the deathscape: Crimes of peace
129(70)
Overview
130(3)
Suvendrini Perera
Joseph Pugliese
7 The confined sea and the wavering of sovereignty
133(15)
Maurizio Albahari
8 Racialized violence in Europe: the Genealogy of Amnesia Project and the immobilization of refugees?
148(15)
Marina Grzinic
9 Life and death at the digitalized border: "Access denied"
163(20)
M. I. Franklin
10 Fatal prescriptions: immigration detention, mismedication and the necropolitics of uncare
183(16)
Jonathan Xavier Inda
PART IV Aesthetic witnessing in the deathscape
199(56)
Overview
200(4)
Suvendrini Perera
Joseph Pugliese
11 Artistic responses to historical and ongoing genocidal violence against Aboriginal women
204(13)
Tess Allas
Ruben Allas
12 Looking into the world from somewhere else: mapping and the visualisation of racial violence in Australia
217(22)
Antonio Travhrso
13 Perpetual trauma: witnessing deathscapes of the colonial project
239(16)
Adrian Stimson
PART V Afterwords
255(10)
14 After Abolition
257(1)
Kyle Carrero Lopez
15 Transformative justice
258(7)
Suvendrini Perera
Joseph Pugliese
Index 265
Suvendrini Perera is John Curtin Distinguished Emeritus Professor at Curtin University, Australia. She is author/editor of nine books including the monographs Survival Media (2017), Australia and the Insular Imagination: Beaches, Borders, Boats and Bodies (2009) and Reaches of Empire (1992).

Joseph Pugliese is Professor of Cultural Studies at Macquarie University, Australia. His previous books include Biometrics: Bodies, Technologies, Biopolitics (Routledge, 2010), State Violence and the Execution of Law: Torture, Black Sites, Drones (Routledge, 2012) and Biopolitics of the More-Than-Human: Forensic Ecologies of Violence (2020).