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The book offers a novel lens to situate Europeanisation as violence – through institutions and technologies of development, cultural heritage, and borders, among others – by bringing South and East within a relational frame. Through four inter-related sections, it foregrounds Europeanisation as infrastructural violence and colonial asymmetries, slow violence and the construction of stratified subalternities, epistemic dispossession, and border epistemologies.
Kolar Aparna is a Researcher in the Department of Cultures at the University of HelsinkiDaria Krivonos is a Researcher at the Swedish School of Social Science, University of HelsinkiElisa Pascucci is Senior Researcher at the Space and Political Agency Research Group, Tampere University
Foreword by Manuela BoatcaIntroduction: Europeanisation as violence: Souths and Easts as method – Daria Krivonos, Kolar Aparna and Elisa PascucciPart I: Europeanisation as infrastructural violence and colonial asymmetries1 Europeanisation and infrastructural violence in South East Europe – Senka Neuman Stanivukovic2 Europeanisation, border violence, counterinsurgency: expanded geographies and reconnected histories across the Sahelo-Sahara and the Mediterranean – Hassan Ould Moctar3 A battleground for French and Russian imperialism: how Chad’s (post)socialist and (post-)colonial present is shaping its political future – Kelma Manatouma4 The making of ‘the bread basket of Europe’: from the Dutch East India Company to the East Company in Ukraine and grain in the Soviet Union – Daria Krivonos and Kolar AparnaPart II: Europeanisation as slow violence and stratified subalternities5 No alternative but Europeanisation: slow violence and critical imaginaries in/from/with South East Europe – Maria-Adriana Deiana and Katarina Kušic6 Hierarchising heritage: bordering Europe and stratified subalternities in the Easts and Souths of Europe – Alexandra Oanca7 The good, the bad and the ugly European: racial Eastern Europeanisation and stratified (sub)alter(n)ities – Ana IvasiucPart III: Europeanisation as epistemic dispossession8 The trauma of the key beyond dominant narratives: navigating epistemic and structural violence in Yemen’s historical landscape – Saba Hamzah9 From singular to plural: how to write the story of a Roma actress – Mihaela DraganPart IV: Border epistemologies of Europeanisation10 Patterns of coloniality within the innovation economy: talent attraction and the converging racialising processes of migration administration – Olivia Maury11 ‘Keep your clients because I quit’: an ethnodrama of creolising research with Roma women – Ioana ?î?tea 12 Swimming with the coelacanth into the black holes of Breslau/Wroclaw, the Eastern Polish Kresy and Madagascar – Olivier KramschAfterword: Souths, Easts and the politics of dissent at this colonial conjuncture – Prem Kumar RajaramIndex