Settler colonialism and home

Main author: Kotef, Hagar
Other authors: Handel, Ariel
Format: Book Chapters           
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id eprints-39771
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description Settler colonialism is a specific configuration of the complex relationship between home and immigration. As an organized migration movement, settler colonialism is a political movement whose main aim is the construction of senses of home and belonging in new territories. Furthermore, as such a movement, settler colonialism is also a massive movement for the construction of physical homes for the colonizing population coupled with the destruction of local homes. Either concretely or more metaphorically, settler colonialism is thus an act of living inside depopulated homes. As a result, legitimacy regimes, legal means and land-use regulations render the homes of the colonized temporary and unstable. But precisely therefore, merely being at home becomes an act of resistance for the colonized. This chapter works through this dialectic of destruction and belonging, presenting the home in the colony as a political site, both of control and of resistance, exploring the political, cultural, economic, symbolic, and affective dimensions of the home in settler-colonial settings.
author_additional Boccagni, Paolo
author_additionalStr Boccagni, Paolo
format Book Chapters
author Kotef, Hagar
author_facet Kotef, Hagar
Handel, Ariel
authorStr Kotef, Hagar
author_letter Kotef, Hagar
author2 Handel, Ariel
author2Str Handel, Ariel
title Settler colonialism and home
publisher Edward Elgar
publishDate 2023
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/39771/