Using the election of the far-right populist coalition government in Italy in 2018 and resultant legislative changes to immigration it brought about as an analytic lens, I examine the material and emotional impact of these changes on young African men, hosted as "unaccompanied minors" in a reception centre in a northern Italian town. I refer to these changes as an "ill wind" and in this paper examine its impacts using Christina Sharpe's notion of "weathering" to refer to the totality of the ongoingness of the anti-Black climate and its effect on Black bodies. I contextualise the young men's experiences within the Italian race landscape, thus drawing attention to the postcolonial legacies of race and racialisation still underpinning Italian society today. I present how historical structures of racial governmentality are integral to the geography of subordination and produce the racialised figure of the migrant, leaving some strangers to remain stranger than others.
Sarah Walker (2023). Weathering the Ill Wind: The Affective and Embodied Dimensions of Anti‐Immigrant Political Discourses on Young African Men in Italy. ANTIPODE, 55, 307-322 [10.1111/anti.12873].
Weathering the Ill Wind: The Affective and Embodied Dimensions of Anti‐Immigrant Political Discourses on Young African Men in Italy
Sarah Walker
2023
Abstract
Using the election of the far-right populist coalition government in Italy in 2018 and resultant legislative changes to immigration it brought about as an analytic lens, I examine the material and emotional impact of these changes on young African men, hosted as "unaccompanied minors" in a reception centre in a northern Italian town. I refer to these changes as an "ill wind" and in this paper examine its impacts using Christina Sharpe's notion of "weathering" to refer to the totality of the ongoingness of the anti-Black climate and its effect on Black bodies. I contextualise the young men's experiences within the Italian race landscape, thus drawing attention to the postcolonial legacies of race and racialisation still underpinning Italian society today. I present how historical structures of racial governmentality are integral to the geography of subordination and produce the racialised figure of the migrant, leaving some strangers to remain stranger than others.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.