Project Details
Narratives of Foreignness and Belonging: Migration as a Discursive Process in Western European Border Regions (1815-1871)
Applicant
Professorin Dr. Levke Harders
Subject Area
Modern and Contemporary History
Term
from 2016 to 2022
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 290461930
Migration was already a common component of society in the early 19th century, but it was only with the concept of the nation-state that it came to be perceived as a significant challenge. The project thus takes a fresh look at inner-European migration between 1815 und 1871, how it was regulated, at exclusion and inclusion and the actorsinvolved in these processes. It conceives of the production of alterity and belonging as a process in order to explore the homogenization and modernization of society as well as nation-building. To this end, the study undertakes a contrasting analysis of state practices surrounding migration as well as the motivations and behaviors of mobile people. With a regional focus on Alsace, Schleswig and Holstein, the study emphasizes the diversity of actors in Migration processes on the one hand and the particular significance of border regions on the other. The project combines two axes of investigation: The first enquires into the categories of social difference in migration processes. Methodologically and theoretically, the study applies an intersectional perspective to the interactions among various categories of social inequality: alterity, gender and education. The second axis of investigation links the analysis of discourses, Regimes and actors: an analysis of foreignness/belonging as a central distinction in European societies is followed by an exploration of the administration of migration and of the motivations and behaviors of mobile people. The distinction between foreign/not foreign structured discourses and regimes alike. The increasing mobility of people alsomobilized norms and practices, as is shown for the border regions of Schleswig, Holstein and Alsace, which I understand both as political-administrative territories and transnational social spaces. These case studies permit us to draw conclusions about the relationships among region, state and nation, not least because the regions studiedexperienced momentous political changes. Petitions for the right to settle, documents on the treatment of foreigners are analyzed quantitatively and qualitatively. These state sources are supplemented by contemporary accounts and ego-documents; in order to explore the actor perspective, the project will also investigate migrant life stories through collective biography. The project opens up various levels for evaluating migration and tackles key gaps in the literature: First, through its combination of meso- and micro-levels, it expands existing lines of enquiry into social and regional history within migration studies. Second, taking up transnational approaches, it systematically elaborates regional logics and documents them with concrete case studies. Third, with a focus on the negotiation of categories of difference, it contributes to current debates on the production of social inequalities. Finally, with its innovative theoretical and methodological framework, it broadens migration studies.
DFG Programme
Research Grants