Undoing Nothing

Book cover featuring the title "Undoing Nothing" with a simple bed scene.

Event Date

Location
Zoom

 

UC-wide migration book series

 

This event is co-hosted by

  • Center for the Study of International Migration, UC Los Angeles

  • Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, UC San Diego

  • Berkeley Interdisciplinary Migration Initiative, UC Berkeley

  • Global Migration Center, UC Davis

 
Smiling man with curly hair and glasses stands on a rocky beach.
Speaker: Paolo Boccagni 

Paolo Boccagni is Professor of Sociology at the University of Trento. He has extensively researched and written on migration, home, displacement, absence, and everyday life. In addition to Undoing Nothing, he is the author of Death in Migration: Foregrounding Loss, Grieving, and Memory Out of Place and Migration and the Search for Home: Mapping Domestic Space in Migrants’ Everyday Lives and the editor of the Handbook on Home and Migration. 

 

Abstract:

What does everyday life look like for young men who flee to Europe, survive, and are then assigned temporary housing? Hypersurveillance or parallel normality, irrelevance, or even nothingness? Based on four years of ethnographic research, Undoing Nothing recounts the untold story of Italian asylum seekers' struggles to produce relevance—that is, to carve out meaning, control, and direction from their legal and existential liminality. This book illuminates a distinctly modern form of purgatory, offering both a perceptive critique of state responses to the so-called refugee crisis and nuanced psychological portraits of a demographic rarely afforded narrative depth and grace. As Alexandra Délano Alonso recently wrote, the book “brings us in to consider our own ways of seeing, our own ways of engaging with migration contexts, inviting us to slow down and observe . . . our shared accountability for the conditions that allow others to make home, imagine the future, live the ‘good life.”

 

Register here 

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