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Walls, Borders, Boundaries
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01 December 2014

How is it that walls, borders, boundaries—and their material and symbolic architectures of division and exclusion—engender their very opposite? This edited volume explores the crossings, permeations, and constructions of cultural and political borders between peoples and territories, examining how walls, borders, and boundaries signify both interdependence and contact within sites of conflict and separation. Topics addressed range from the geopolitics of Europe’s historical and contemporary city walls to conceptual reflections on the intersection of human rights and separating walls, the memory politics generated in historically disputed border areas, theatrical explorations of border crossings, and the mapping of boundaries within migrant communities.
“The diverse contributions to this book are all thoughtful, well-researched, and significant. The editors have organized them into appropriate sections and provided them with bibliographies, a useful Index, and a cogent and informative contextual Introduction. The collection is both diverse and unified, and the essays are both specific and general, and of contemporary, historical, and timeless import.” • Pol Int
“…a highly welcome and useful addition to… scholarship [that] brings together scholars from several academic fields, including history, geography, anthropology, and Germanistik, in a fruitful effort to promote interdisciplinary dialogue and cooperation… The book’s thoughtful and valuable contributions reach far beyond Berlin alone. Indeed, the multiplicity of approaches and perspectives in many ways enriches the book. The study deserves to reach a wide readership among scholars of a number of disciplines, and it is to be hoped that it will inspire further study of the themes and issues addressed here.” • German Studies Review
“The individual contributions are almost invariably of a high standard and will be of interest not only to researchers but also to students in a range of fields, including contemporary German history, European Studies, political geography, and border studies. The contributions are well written, and the volume as a whole is well edited and includes numerous illuminating images.” • Central European History
“…[the] congregation of interdisciplinary accounts helps [to] demystify the fall of the Berlin Wall, and to destabilise the romanticisation of ‘post-wall’ eras. In a timely way the contributions also highlight the diversity of barriers and boundaries which anchor collective life in a world that sometimes claims for itself a kind of borderless universality. However the collection is at its sharpest when the autonomies of art, of the body, and of the material world are allowed to speak as loudly as persisting cultural and architectural divisions.” • Society and Space–Environment and Planning D
“This volume is recommended to all scholars who are interested in walls, boundaries and migrations. It opens up important and new perspectives for research and is also very useful thank to the bibliography, the names, place and subject indexes.” • H-Soz-u-Kult
“[A] revealing reflection and interpretation upon the development of post-World War II Europe. It offers a vision of imposed borders and boundaries that have become familiar yet remain disturbing; such a dichotomy is explored in various ways in the essays to make a provocative and fascinating book. The book is especially strong in the combination of the empirical and theoretical, treating borders and boundaries at many different levels from the purely physical to the social, cultural and political, as well as the symbolic. [It is]...a very welcome addition to the field.” • Wendy Pullan, University of Cambridge
“The volume is interdisciplinary and broadly conceptualized yet it focuses on some key aspects that give the volume sufficient focus and depth. The quality of the contributions (including the substantive introduction) is consistently high…[and] not merely a collection of pieces from various disciplines; instead many contributions speak to one another across individual disciplines, e.g., in a consideration of the ambivalent or contradictory effects of walls and boundaries—culturally, historically, and socially.” • Friederike Eigler, Georgetown University
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Walls, Borders, Boundaries
Marc Silberman, Karen E. Till, and Janet Ward
PART I: CITY WALLS
Chapter 1. The Dialectics of Urban Form in Absolutist France
Yair Mintzker
Chapter 2. The Camp in the City, the City as Camp: Berlin’s Other Guarded Walls
Olaf Briese
Chapter 3. “Threshold Resistance”: Dani Karavan’s Berlin Installation Grundgesetz
Eric Jarosinski
Chapter 4. Did Walls Really Come Down? Contemporary B/ordering Walls in Europe
Daniela Vicherat Mattar
PART II: BORDER ZONES
Chapter 5. Border Guarding as Social Practice: A Case Study of Czech Communist Governance and Hidden Transcripts
Muriel Blaive and Thomas Lindenberger
Chapter 6. A “Complicated Contrivance”: West Berlin behind the Wall, 1971-1989
David Barclay
Chapter 7. Moving Borders and Competing Civilizing Missions: Germany, Poland, and Ukraine in the Context of the EU’s Eastern Enlargement
Steffi Marung
PART III: MIGRATING BOUNDARIES
Chapter 8. Migrants, Mosques, and Minarets: Reworking the Boundaries of Liberal Democracy in Switzerland and Germany
Patricia Ehrkamp
Chapter 9. Not Our Kind: Generational Barriers Dividing Postwar Albanian Migrant Communities
Isa Blumi
Chapter 10. Invisible Migrants: Memory and German Nationhood in the Shadow of the Berlin Wall
Jeffrey Jurgens
Chapter 11. Crossing Boundaries in Cyprus: Landscapes of Memory in the Demilitarized Zone
Gülgün Kayim
Works Cited
Notes on Contributors
Index