Dr. Marco Jacquemet: Transidioma Afloat – Communication, Power, and Migration in the Mediterranean Sea.

October 17, 2024, 12:30 pm to 2:00 pm

Transidioma Afloat: Communication, Power, and Migration in the Mediterranean Sea- hosted by the Department of Anthropology as part of the Anthropology Colloquium Series. 

Speaker: Dr. Marco Jacquemet
Communications Studies, University of San Francisco

When & Where:
Thursday, Oct. 17, 2024 | 12:30pm-2:00pm
Anthropology & Sociology Building (ANSO) Room 207, 6303 NW Marine Drive
Light refreshments to follow in Lino Lounge. Please RSVP in advance.

RSVP here

Abstract:

One consequence of European unification has been the transformation of the Mediterranean Sea into a barrier to stop the flow of unwanted migrants. In this zone, the communicative networks of “Fortress Europe” have established, through interception and monitoring technologies (and their corresponding speech acts), a techno-political moat surrounding European Union territorial waters. This paper documents how maritime encounters between state authorities, migrants, and fishermen are shaped by the multiple languages and channels of communication that traverse the Mediterranean Sea—a communicative environment I call “transidiomatic.” With the concept of transidioma, I explore how this communicative landscape is undergoing rapid change due to late-modern cultural globalization, which creates ways of speaking more similar to the communicative interactions that emerged in this area after the Middle Ages than to those of modern nation-states. More importantly, I want to discuss how these hybrid interactions are situated in a political and military context where the European Union and its member states impose a shibboleth-like test on refugees and migrants—a test that often contributes to serious and irreversible human rights violations.


First Nations land acknowledegement

We acknowledge that UBC’s campuses are situated within the traditional territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh, and in the traditional, ancestral, unceded territory of the Syilx Okanagan Nation and their peoples.


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