Borderlands: Towards an Anthropology of the Cosmopolitan Condition. By MICHEL AGIER

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Borderlands: Towards an Anthropology of the Cosmopolitan Condition. By MICHEL AGIER

Cite as: Agier M. 2016, Borderlands: Towards an Anthropology of the Cosmopolitan Condition. By Michel Agier. Cambridge: Polity.

In this timely book, anthropologist Michel Agier addresses these questions and examines the character of the borderlands that emerge on the margins of nation-states. Drawing on his ethnographic fieldwork, he shows that borders, far from disappearing, have acquired a new kind of centrality in our societies, becoming reference points for the growing numbers of people who do not find a place in the countries they wish to reach. They have become the site for a new kind of subject, the border dweller, who is both inside and outside, enclosed on the one hand and excluded on the other, and who is obliged to learn, under harsh conditions, the ways of the world and of other people. In this respect, the lives of migrants, even in the uncertainties or dangers of the borderlands, tell us something about the condition in which everyone is increasingly living today, a cosmopolitan condition in which the experience of the unfamiliar is more common and the relation between self and other is in constant renewal.

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