This workshop seeks to trace the deep histories and afterlives (or longue durée) of spaces of containment, from sites of coerced or forced labor to asylum seeker reception centers, detention facilities, and deportation infrastructures. It aims to critically examine the multiple repurposings of these sites, which are historically and currently marked by coercion, discipline, violence, and racial hierarchies. We are particularly interested in interrogating how these regimes intersect with various forms of extractivism and the experiences of displaced people, including acts of contestation.
By exploring the historically produced infrastructures, logistical systems, and their changing assemblages of actors that give these spaces their “afterlives,” the workshop seeks to bring together empirical research on the scalar configurations of (im)mobility governance at the intersections of state, capital, and labor. Some of the questions we seek to explore include: How the built environment, architecture, and spatial arrangements shape the experiences of displaced people; The ways these spaces enable discipline, control, surveillance, and the reinforcement of racial hierarchies; How such sites are connected to changing forms of extractivism within the shifting dynamics of capitalism; And how the spatial organizations of these sites interact with broader regimes of confinement, labor exploitation, and the invisibilization of violence.
Wednesday, 10 December
10:00 – 10:30
Opening remarks by the organizer, Ayşe Çağlar, IWM Permanent Felow / Professor at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Vienna
10:30 – 12:30, SESSION I
Architectures That Speak
Paolo Novak, Centre for Migration and Diaspora Studies (SOAS), University of London
Sheltered in Transit: Trace of Toute-Making at the French-Italian Border
Martina Tazzioli, Department of History and Culture, University of Bologna
13:30 – 15:20, SESSION II
Leros: Islands of Exile
Platon Issaias, School of Architecture, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
The Many Lives of Buildings: Renaissance and Change in Detroit
Georges Ozanne, Independent Researcher
15:30 – 17:00, SESSION III
Conjunctures of Capitalism and Empire: Spaces of Containment, Care, and Extractive Labor at Tempelhofer Feld
Katharyne Mitchell, University of California, Santa Cruz
Hosting Workers or Controlling Migrants: The Foyer or the Long History of the French Specialized Housing System
Laura Guérin, Université Paris Nanterre
17:00 – 17:30
Closing remarks by Karin Harrasser, Director of the ifk International Research Center for Cultural Studies, University of Art and Design, Linz
