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Made to Move: Placemaking and Accumulated Attachments among Palestinian Refugees from Syria

Mar

4

Global Studies Event
Linderman 200
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For the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who had long lived in Syria as refugees, the advent of civil war in 2011 occasioned not a first experience of displacement but rather another iteration of enforced migration, necessitating encounters with new places of refuge. Matthew DeMaio traces the history of Damascus’s Yarmouk Palestinian Refugee Camp and considers how, upon Yarmouk’s depopulation, its former residents have accumulated material, social and affective ties to new places of residence through everyday practices of dwelling. Based on ethnographic research with former Yarmouk residents now living across Jordan, Lebanon, Europe and the United States, as well as archival and digital methods, DeMaio demonstrates that the various places to which these refugees have accumulated attachments are not bounded or experienced in isolation. Rather, placemaking practices that occur within one locality are shaped by, and reciprocally reshape, attachments to, and understandings of, the whole palimpsest of places that these refugees have accumulated through lifetimes and generations of movement. DeMaio illuminates that for many refugees, and for Palestinian refugees in particular, displacement is not a singular experience in the past but an ongoing and iterative process.

This event is sponsored by CGIS, Global Studies, and Sociology & Anthropology