Nina Gren
Seminar

Occupied Intimacies: Borderization in Palestine, Georgia and Western Sahara

Welcome to the LNUC Concurrences Seminar Series in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies!

Lecturer
Nina Gren, Lund University

Nina Gren is a senior lecturer in Social Anthropology at the Department of Sociology, Lund University, Sweden. Her current research focuses on the Israeli military occupation and its effects on family relations, everyday life and rituals in Palestine. She is also involved in research on Swedish humanitarian aid. Gren is interested in social transformation in contexts of political violence, collective memory, martyrdom, gender and diasporic relations. She has fieldwork experience from the Palestinian territories and from Denmark and Sweden. 

Title
Occupied Intimacies: Borderization in Palestine, Georgia and Western Sahara

Abstract
In this presentation, I explore and compare three different cases of military occupation, the Israeli occupation of Palestine, the Moroccan occupation of Western Sahara, and the Russian Occupation of Georgian South Ossetia. Building on ethnographic fieldworks carried out in 2022 and 2023, I show that these contemporary military occupations manifest themselves as evolving processes of dominance which extend beyond direct military force and violence and into the intimate social relationships of their subjects. Control is exercised through multiple acts of “borderization”, which causes separation and rupture by placing people on different sides of physical and bureaucratic borders. This, I demonstrate, effectively disrupts occupied people’s ability to do family. 

Being unable to take your elderly relative to a doctor’s appointment or to visit the grave of your deceased brother are not only practical obstacles, but they also have moral and existential implications. The disruption of kinship practices should therefore not be taken lightly. Rather, this is revealed as a core mode of domination and control, which threatens intimate aspects of life. Ultimately, the effects of this go beyond individual tragedies and unfulfilled kinship obligations. As the occupations become protracted, social divisions as well as cultural transformations are cemented. 

The seminar will be held in English. 

Please register if you want to participate via Zoom. 

Linnaeus University Centre for Concurrences in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies

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