TY - JOUR PY - 2010// TI - Border theatre: on the arts of security and resistance JO - Cultural geographies A1 - Amoore, Louise A1 - Hall, Alexandra SP - 299 EP - 319 VL - 17 IS - 3 N2 - This essay addresses the conditions and limits of artistic interventions in the contemporary landscape of border security. It argues that the theatrical rituals of border security — scanning, screening, verifying identity — have become domesticated and all-but-invisible in our daily scopic regimes. At the same time, the essay suggests that surprising, enchanting encounters with the techniques and technologies of security can interrupt border sequences and create invigorated possibilities for public engagement. An ethics of unanticipated worlds is proposed as an alternative to political action as always proximate to observable and visible violence. In a world where rituals of border security increasingly operate precisely by pre-deciding and pre-empting in advance, art that works in the absence of certainty and decidability offers a crucial window through which to evaluate and respond.
LA - SN - 1474-4740 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1474474010368604 ID - ref1 ER -