Undoing Nothing

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11 juin 2025

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OAPEN

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open access




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Paolo Boccagni, « Undoing Nothing », OAPEN Library Society and social sciences, ID : 10670/1.294893...


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What does everyday life look like for young men who flee to Europe, survive, and are then assigned temporary housing? Hypersurveillance or parallel normality, irrelevance, or even nothingness? Based on four years of ethnographic research, Undoing Nothing recounts the untold story of Italian asylum seekers’ struggles to produce relevance—that is, to carve out meaning, control, and direction from their legal and existential liminality. Their ways of inhabiting space and time rest on a deeply ambivalent position: together and alone, inside and outside, absent and present. Their racialized bodies dwell in their assigned residence while their selves inhabit a suspended translocal space of moral economies, nightmares, and furtive dreams. This book illuminates a distinctly modern form of purgatory, offering both a perceptive critique of state responses to the so-called refugee crisis and nuanced psychological portraits of a demographic rarely afforded narrative depth and grace. “Undoing Nothing is an exceptional book. It moves us away from dramatic and sensational descriptions of refugee predicaments and toward a detailed and perceptive analysis of the ways people navigate and manage their lives in the interstices between being stuck and in motion, surviving and aspiring.” —HENRIK VIGH, Professor of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen “Paolo Boccagni’s ethnography of the absurd confronts the existential question of what it means to live in limbo while waiting for asylum. This is a serious work from a leading thinker on how migration shapes experiences of being ‘home.’” —DAVID FITZGERALD, Professor of Sociology, University of California, San Diego “A must-read book in the age of legal and existential liminality for asylum seekers.” —ILSE VAN LIEMPT, Associate Professor of Human Geography, Utrecht University

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