The everyday, 'ordinary' citizens, and ambiguous governance affect in Antwerp
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
Display more detailsDisplay less details
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.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [243179]
- Electronic publications [129864]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [29982]
- Open Access publications [104392]
Upload full text
Use your RU credentials (u/z-number and password) to log in with SURFconext to upload a file for processing by the repository team.