In
McKowen, J.; Borneman, J. (ed.), Digesting difference: Migrant incorporation and mutual belonging in Europe, pp. 103-127Publication type
Part of book or chapter of book

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Editor(s)
McKowen, J.
Borneman, J.
Organization
SW OZ RSCR CAOS
Languages used
English (eng)
Book title
McKowen, J.; Borneman, J. (ed.), Digesting difference: Migrant incorporation and mutual belonging in Europe
Page start
p. 103
Page end
p. 127
Subject
Anthropology and Development StudiesAbstract
In Belgium, the rise of the Flemish populist far-right instigated the creation of an affective governance of neighborly interactions and civic dispositions in pluri-ethnic urban spaces. Taking as an extended case the development of a so-called diversity trajectory in Antwerp, this chapter argues that this governance of samenleven (living together) co-opted the populist notion that everyday neighborhood life of 'ordinary people' forms a distinct, authentic realm. This construction of everyday life generates contradictory governmental pushes and pulls - fascination, desire, suspicion, indifference - around different categories of residents and vernacular practices of incorporation, which I describe as an oscillation between Romanticist and Enlightenment affect. As a result, actually existing relations between white working-class and Moroccan-background residents - the residents whom governance actors deemed 'ordinary' and viewed as authentically immersed in neighborhood life - were unintelligible to governance actors as ethical practices in their own right and dismissed as deficient living together.
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- Academic publications [229196]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [28727]
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