Recent academic discourses highlight borders as dynamic forces influencing life beyond territorial demarcations. This paper examines belonging and citizenship by looking at the case of Bengali-speaking Muslim women who married across the India-Bangladesh border. Initially, clandestine visits helped to sustain kinship ties, but increasing border enforcement and emphasis on documentation have resulted in regulated journeys with the help of passports. Building on the politics of belonging and translocational positionality framework, this paper emphasises the fluidity of their belonging, reflecting the border's nature, and addresses the ambivalence in navigating citizenship and belonging. Ethnographically looking at West Bengal's border villages, the paper analyses how the sense of belonging in a borderland is complex, ambivalent and shaped by personal experiences and not solely contingent upon the possession of legal-bureaucratic documentation. This study enriches discourses on borders and belonging by looking at the layers of negotiation in borderlands, challenging straightforward notions of belonging.
机构:
Univ Penn, Dept Sociol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
Univ Penn, Latin Amer & Latino Studies Program LALS, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USAUniv Penn, Dept Sociol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
机构:
York Univ, Fac Liberal Arts & Profess Studies, Dept Social Sci, 4700 Keele St,Ross Bldg South S761A, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, CanadaTrier Univ, Dept Human Geog, Governance & Sustainabil Lab, Trier, Germany
机构:
Univ St Andrews, Dept Social Anthropol, 71 North St, St Andrews KY16 9AL, Fife, Scotland
Univ St Andrews, Sch Hist, 71 North St, St Andrews KY16 9AL, Fife, ScotlandUniv St Andrews, Dept Social Anthropol, 71 North St, St Andrews KY16 9AL, Fife, Scotland