The immense so-called Arab Spring mobilization suggested a politically-produced process; created by contingent dimensions and fluent coalitions that influence the current migration dynamics and policies in Europe. The present contribution is part of a multi-local ethnography effectuated in Morocco (Khouribga 2007; Tangiers 2011) and Turin among the ultimate-decade's Moroccan immigrants and Tunisian migrants from the so-called North African Emergency. During summer 2011, Moroccan media renamed Tangiers: 'People's Capital of the 20 February Movement'; depicted as young and new, albeit heterogeneous in age, genre and of socio-political appurtenance. Furthermore, the last decade has witnessed populace protests throughout Morocco; particularly in small, medium-sized cities like Khouribga; emigration springboard towards Turin since the eighties. Here the 20 F movement redefined and integrated itself with local-migration policies. Crucial, politically-related events within an intimate and familiar sphere - concomitant with intergenerational, social breakdowns and continuity amplified by emigration - will emerge through life-stories. Migrants, both in Tangiers and Turin, criticize the hogra as standing for vulnerability and a life-style when confronted by power. My analysis shows how this sentiment - publicized during the Arab Spring, but rooted in Moroccan history - emigrates by accompanying people, who encounter growing migration-policy and life-condition difficulties in a new context. In conclusion, I will show how corporeity can transmute into a manipulatively exploitable power-element; culminating in individual and collective violence. This occurred both during Tangier's movement and in Turin amongst Tunisian Asylum-seekers and migrants held within the CIE (Centre of Identification and Expulsion).

Rossi, A. (2013). Dissident bodies and migrant hogra among young Maghrebi during two years of the ‘Arab Spring’ (Tangiers 2011, Morocco; Turin 2010-2013, Italy). MEDITERRANEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, 4(11), 58-71 [10.5901/mjss.2013.v4n11p58].

Dissident bodies and migrant hogra among young Maghrebi during two years of the ‘Arab Spring’ (Tangiers 2011, Morocco; Turin 2010-2013, Italy)

ROSSI, ALICE
2013

Abstract

The immense so-called Arab Spring mobilization suggested a politically-produced process; created by contingent dimensions and fluent coalitions that influence the current migration dynamics and policies in Europe. The present contribution is part of a multi-local ethnography effectuated in Morocco (Khouribga 2007; Tangiers 2011) and Turin among the ultimate-decade's Moroccan immigrants and Tunisian migrants from the so-called North African Emergency. During summer 2011, Moroccan media renamed Tangiers: 'People's Capital of the 20 February Movement'; depicted as young and new, albeit heterogeneous in age, genre and of socio-political appurtenance. Furthermore, the last decade has witnessed populace protests throughout Morocco; particularly in small, medium-sized cities like Khouribga; emigration springboard towards Turin since the eighties. Here the 20 F movement redefined and integrated itself with local-migration policies. Crucial, politically-related events within an intimate and familiar sphere - concomitant with intergenerational, social breakdowns and continuity amplified by emigration - will emerge through life-stories. Migrants, both in Tangiers and Turin, criticize the hogra as standing for vulnerability and a life-style when confronted by power. My analysis shows how this sentiment - publicized during the Arab Spring, but rooted in Moroccan history - emigrates by accompanying people, who encounter growing migration-policy and life-condition difficulties in a new context. In conclusion, I will show how corporeity can transmute into a manipulatively exploitable power-element; culminating in individual and collective violence. This occurred both during Tangier's movement and in Turin amongst Tunisian Asylum-seekers and migrants held within the CIE (Centre of Identification and Expulsion).
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Imagery and Practices of Dissent; Social Movements; Maghrebi Migration; Hogra (humiliation); Corporeity; Violence
English
2013
4
11
58
71
none
Rossi, A. (2013). Dissident bodies and migrant hogra among young Maghrebi during two years of the ‘Arab Spring’ (Tangiers 2011, Morocco; Turin 2010-2013, Italy). MEDITERRANEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, 4(11), 58-71 [10.5901/mjss.2013.v4n11p58].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/72980
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