Imperial (Re)assemblages and Reconstructions: Intimate Terrors and Ontological Possibilities

Authors

  • Anna M. Agathangelou York University (Political Science)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1913-5874/37340

Abstract

The jade eucalyptus trees stand in the centre of the village of Aphania, holding secrets, gently exuding their soft scent. The aroma strikes deep chords within me, invoking images of my many walks with many important persons in my life (friends, father, mother, grandfathers, grandmas, aunts and uncles, cousins). This small village was constituted by many different struggles, joys, the sweat of so many ancestors that brought it to life again and again even when it was supposed to disappear. I am remembering as I walk today in the midst of the eucalyptus scents, this village of approximately a 1000, full of life, its cobbled streets walked daily by all peoples, Muslims, Christians, Greek, Turkish, maronites, rich, poor, roma peoples, black, olive-skinned peoples, us. It is in this village that the imperial-sovereign machine ground some of us, and our land, into its surplus, that vital energy that would make possible its most anxious desire, the creation of buffers: ethno-national conflicts. The village next door kicked out much of its population, those Turkish Cypriots who were deemed contaminants to a purist ethno-nationalist project of Greekness.

References

Agathangelou, A.M. “Necro- (neo) Colonizations and Economies of Blackness: Of Slaughters, “Accidents,” “Disasters” and Captive Flesh,” in Nair, Sheila and Shampa Biswas, (eds.) International Relations and States of Exception: Margins, Peripheries and Excluded Bodies, New York: Routledge (November 2009), 186-209.

Mark Anthony Neal. “It’s your Nigger Problem, Not Hip-Hop’s.” The New Black Magazine, 2007, http://thenewblackmagazine.com/view.aspx?index=737

Saidiya V. Hartman. Scenes of Subjection: Terror, Slavery, and Self-Making in Nineteenth-Century America. New York: Oxford UP, 1997.

Saidiya V. Hartmann. “The Time of Slavery,” The South Atlantic Quarterly, 101 (4) (2002): 758. 2

Trask, Haunani-Kay. Night is a Sharkskin Drum

Downloads

Published

2009-09-01

How to Cite

Agathangelou, A. M. (2009). Imperial (Re)assemblages and Reconstructions: Intimate Terrors and Ontological Possibilities. InTensions, (3). https://doi.org/10.25071/1913-5874/37340

Issue

Section

Articles