'Dancing in the mouth of the wolf’: constructing the border through everyday life in socialist Albania
'Dancing in the mouth of the wolf’: constructing the border through everyday life in socialist Albania
Little is known about everyday life in socialist Albania, and even less in what were strategically sensitive and closed-off border areas. Through the lens of everyday life, and a historical geography perspective, this paper contributes to border studies by examining the multiplicity of border processes at different levels and for differently situated social actors. The paper also contributes to knowledge on ‘actually existing’ socialism, in particular in border zones along the (former) Iron Curtain, by setting out both the way in which the border was constituted materially, and how border spaces were experienced, lived and routinely practiced by local residents. The social and temporal reproduction of borders interlaces state actors and local residents in intricate and often ambiguous ways. Evidence comes from oral history narratives of middle-aged and older Albanians who at the time of the research lived in villages bordering present-day Montenegro, Macedonia and Greece. The paper finds that dominant bordering frameworks imposed by the state were routinely challenged, reinterpreted and negotiated from below, producing a dynamic and multifaceted b/ordering process. Local residents complied with, but also resisted, top-down statecraft of control and domination, constantly engaged in a balancing act that often seemed like ‘dancing in the mouth of the wolf (i.e. state apparatus)’
Albania, borders, geopolitics , socialism , Iron Curtain, fear, oral history , everyday life
82-93
Vullnetari, Julie
463db806-c809-43d6-9795-1104e3a5788b
1 January 2019
Vullnetari, Julie
463db806-c809-43d6-9795-1104e3a5788b
Vullnetari, Julie
(2019)
'Dancing in the mouth of the wolf’: constructing the border through everyday life in socialist Albania.
Journal of Historical Geography, 63, .
(doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2018.11.005).
Abstract
Little is known about everyday life in socialist Albania, and even less in what were strategically sensitive and closed-off border areas. Through the lens of everyday life, and a historical geography perspective, this paper contributes to border studies by examining the multiplicity of border processes at different levels and for differently situated social actors. The paper also contributes to knowledge on ‘actually existing’ socialism, in particular in border zones along the (former) Iron Curtain, by setting out both the way in which the border was constituted materially, and how border spaces were experienced, lived and routinely practiced by local residents. The social and temporal reproduction of borders interlaces state actors and local residents in intricate and often ambiguous ways. Evidence comes from oral history narratives of middle-aged and older Albanians who at the time of the research lived in villages bordering present-day Montenegro, Macedonia and Greece. The paper finds that dominant bordering frameworks imposed by the state were routinely challenged, reinterpreted and negotiated from below, producing a dynamic and multifaceted b/ordering process. Local residents complied with, but also resisted, top-down statecraft of control and domination, constantly engaged in a balancing act that often seemed like ‘dancing in the mouth of the wolf (i.e. state apparatus)’
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Albanian Border MS Final JV 16 Nov 18
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Albania Border Captions Final
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Fig 2 Command post Bulqiza
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Fig 3 Internal passport stamped
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Fig 4a Observation point Tamara
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Fig 4b Tamara panopticon view
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 18 November 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 December 2018
Published date: 1 January 2019
Keywords:
Albania, borders, geopolitics , socialism , Iron Curtain, fear, oral history , everyday life
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 432472
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/432472
ISSN: 0305-7488
PURE UUID: 47c0af65-0fd4-4453-a99c-bed682a7b64e
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Date deposited: 16 Jul 2019 17:01
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 04:22
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