On Digital Crossings in Europe

Publication date

2014

Authors

Ponzanesi, SandraISNI 0000000038894338
Leurs, K.H.A.ORCID 0000-0003-4765-6464ISNI 0000000395084739

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

‘On Digital Crossings in Europe’ explores the entanglements of digital media and migration beyond the national and mono-ethnic focus. We argue how borders, identity and affectivity have been destabilized and reconfigured through medium-specific technological affordances, opting for a comparative and postcolonial framework that focuses on diversity in conjunction with cosmopolitan aspirations. Internet applications make it possible to sustain new forms of diaspora and networks, which operate within and beyond Europe, making issues of ethnicity, nationality, race and class not obsolete but transformed. It is therefore important and timely to analyse how these reconfigurations take place and affect everyday life. Using a critical approach to digital tools that avoids utopian notions of connectivity and borderlessness, this article highlights the dyssimmetries and tensions produced by the ubiquitousness of digital connectivity. It further introduces the different contributions to the special issue making connections and tracing relations among themes and methods as well as sketching main patterns for further research. It also offers a panorama of other related studies and projects in the field, which partake in a critical reassessment of the enabling power of digital media and their divisive implications for new forms of surveillance, online racism and ‘economic’ inequality, which we gather under the heading of postcolonial digital humanities.

Keywords

Europe, diaspora, border, digital, racism, postcolonial, digital humanities, Taverne, International, SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities

Citation

Ponzanesi, S & Leurs, K H A 2014, 'On Digital Crossings in Europe', Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 3-22. https://doi.org/10.1386/cjmc.5.1.3_1