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OverviewBorder enclaves examines the Spanish enclave of Melilla as a prism for understanding Europe's contemporary dislocations. Based on over a decade of ethnographic research, it explores how borders are enforced, contested and inhabited in a city suspended between Africa and Europe, colonial legacies and modern regimes. Through a polyphonic narrative following smugglers, migrants, teachers and politicians, it reveals how everyday practices and symbolic performances shape life in the enclave. Selective visibility who is seen or erased structures authority and exclusion. Situating Melilla within broader processes like Spain's colonial history and Europe's border restructuring, the book argues that its fragmented sovereignties and external dependencies make it a paradigmatic site for grasping Europe's precarious margins. It calls for an ethnographic lens attuned to dislocation as both lived experience and analytic tool. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Laia Soto BermantPublisher: Manchester University Press Imprint: Manchester University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.483kg ISBN: 9781526190635ISBN 10: 152619063 Pages: 216 Publication Date: 26 May 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available, will be POD This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon it's release. This is a print on demand item which is still yet to be released. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1 Mystery of Africa, history of Spain 2 The people without history 3 The border spectacle 4 Children of the street 5 The end of a frontier economy 6 The criminal underworld Conclusion References -- .ReviewsIn the hands of a gifted ethnographer such as Laia Soto Bermant, stories about a place such as Melila challenge so many of the taken for granted presuppositions of scholarship on borders, on being European or North African, on religious co-habitation, on the spaces in between. To read this book is to be transported into a nest of contradictions that ever so satisfyingly reveal how fragile and thus transformable modern-day social classification can be. — Ilana Gershon, Herbert S. Autrey professor of anthropology, Rice University -- . ‘In the hands of a gifted ethnographer such as Laia Soto Bermant, stories about a place such as Melilla challenge so many of the taken for granted presuppositions of scholarship on borders, on being European or North African, on religious co-habitation, on the spaces in between. To read this book is to be transported into a nest of contradictions that ever so satisfyingly reveal how fragile and thus transformable modern-day social classification can be.’ – Ilana Gershon, Rice University, USA ‘Written with compassion and precision, Soto-Bermant demonstrates the power of ethnography to untangle the complex co-production of African and European state-projects and border regimes. Centred on the voices and experiences of those who inhabit, pass through and govern the political and economic cross-roads that is Melilla, the work traces the constitution and tense equilibrium of divergent national imaginaries and religious identities. Complicating mass-media depictions of humanitarian crisis by revealing the scope and subtleties of bureaucratic violence pursued in the name of national integration, Soto-Bermant’s exceptional study is of value to anthropology, political science, geography, migration studies and humanitarian practice.’ – Brenda Chalfin, University of Florida, USA -- . Author InformationDr. Laia Soto Bermant is a social anthropologist and Kone Research Fellow at the University of Helsinki. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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