Unbounding Europe: Bordering and the Politics of Mediterranean Solidarity in Sicily and Tunisia

At a time of global border fortification and rising nationalisms, Unbounding Europe analyzes the potential of Mediterranean borderlands to offer alternative models of belonging. Drawing on ethnographic and archival research, Ilaria Giglioli writes about relations between Sicilians and Tunisians and how they negotiate relationships of proximity and difference in multiple arenas of life. She argues that histories of marginalization within the nation-state do not automatically make borderlands inclusive for migrants. Understanding the interplay of different degrees of marginality is key to identify how solidarity movements can emerge and be effective.

Giglioli argues that depoliticized celebrations of cross-Mediterranean coexistence ignore longstanding inequalities and reinforce symbolic hierarchies between Sicilians and Tunisians. She stresses that recognizing and addressing these inequalities is key to developing a transformative politics of solidarity. Rather than idealize intermediate border spaces or subjects, Unbounding Europe asserts that it is more effective to reconstruct histories of material and symbolic boundary drawing to demonstrate the contingency and mutability of borders.

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Unbounding Europe: Bordering and the Politics of Mediterranean Solidarity in Sicily and Tunisia

At a time of global border fortification and rising nationalisms, Unbounding Europe analyzes the potential of Mediterranean borderlands to offer alternative models of belonging. Drawing on ethnographic and archival research, Ilaria Giglioli writes about relations between Sicilians and Tunisians and how they negotiate relationships of proximity and difference in multiple arenas of life. She argues that histories of marginalization within the nation-state do not automatically make borderlands inclusive for migrants. Understanding the interplay of different degrees of marginality is key to identify how solidarity movements can emerge and be effective.

Giglioli argues that depoliticized celebrations of cross-Mediterranean coexistence ignore longstanding inequalities and reinforce symbolic hierarchies between Sicilians and Tunisians. She stresses that recognizing and addressing these inequalities is key to developing a transformative politics of solidarity. Rather than idealize intermediate border spaces or subjects, Unbounding Europe asserts that it is more effective to reconstruct histories of material and symbolic boundary drawing to demonstrate the contingency and mutability of borders.

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Unbounding Europe: Bordering and the Politics of Mediterranean Solidarity in Sicily and Tunisia

Unbounding Europe: Bordering and the Politics of Mediterranean Solidarity in Sicily and Tunisia

by Ilaria Giglioli
Unbounding Europe: Bordering and the Politics of Mediterranean Solidarity in Sicily and Tunisia

Unbounding Europe: Bordering and the Politics of Mediterranean Solidarity in Sicily and Tunisia

by Ilaria Giglioli

eBook

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Overview

At a time of global border fortification and rising nationalisms, Unbounding Europe analyzes the potential of Mediterranean borderlands to offer alternative models of belonging. Drawing on ethnographic and archival research, Ilaria Giglioli writes about relations between Sicilians and Tunisians and how they negotiate relationships of proximity and difference in multiple arenas of life. She argues that histories of marginalization within the nation-state do not automatically make borderlands inclusive for migrants. Understanding the interplay of different degrees of marginality is key to identify how solidarity movements can emerge and be effective.

Giglioli argues that depoliticized celebrations of cross-Mediterranean coexistence ignore longstanding inequalities and reinforce symbolic hierarchies between Sicilians and Tunisians. She stresses that recognizing and addressing these inequalities is key to developing a transformative politics of solidarity. Rather than idealize intermediate border spaces or subjects, Unbounding Europe asserts that it is more effective to reconstruct histories of material and symbolic boundary drawing to demonstrate the contingency and mutability of borders.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501782275
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 09/15/2025
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 174
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Ilaria Giglioli is Assistant Professor of International Studies at the University of San Francisco. A human geographer by training, she studies the creation, legitimization and contestation of borders, with particular focus on the relationship between border fortification, uneven development, and the production of social difference.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Politics of Mixing inMediterranean Borderlands
1. Mediterranean Interconnections: Migration, Colonialism,and the Southern Question
2. Fusing the Races or Tracing Their Boundaries? The Paradoxes of Colonial Mediterraneanism
3. Mediterranean or "Not European Enough"? Drawing the Boundaries of Europe in Mazara del Vallo
4. Mediterranean Redevelopments: "Ethnic Packaging"and Contested Urban Space
5. The New Church of Africa: Catholic Mediterraneanism and the Negotiation of Religious Difference
Conclusion: Reclaiming the Mediterranean

What People are Saying About This

Lorenzo Rinelli

In Unbounding Europe, Ilaria Giglioli powerfully argues against the idea of the Mediterranean as a natural border in a fresh and mature manner within a large tradition of decolonial studies.

Camilla Hawthorne

At a time of violent border fortification, rampant xenophobia, and resurgent neofascism, Unbounding Europe could not be more urgent. Giglioli does not look for answers to our global political impasse in naive spatial metaphors of hybridity but rather in the powerful, everyday solidarities that emerge from shared histories of racial capitalism to challenge the taken-for-grantedness of borders.

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