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Affective energies: Sensory bodies on the beach in Darwin,Australia
Affiliation:1. Aarhus University, Department of Animal Science, P. O. Box 50, DK-8830 Tjele, Denmark;2. Ministry of Environment and Food, The Danish AgriFish Agency, Center for Agriculture, Nyropsgade 30, DK-1780 Copenhagen V, Denmark;3. Danish Pig Research Centre, Axeltorv 3, DK-1609 Copenhagen V, Denmark;1. Hopital Louis Pradel, Lyon-Bron, France;2. Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA;3. Sanatorio de la Trinidad Mitre, Buenos Aires, Argentina;4. University Hospital for Infectious Diseases, Zagreb, Croatia;5. Centre for Cardiovascular Surgery and Transplantation, Brno, Czech Republic;6. Central European Institute of Technology, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic;7. Flinders Medical Centre, Adelaide, Australia;8. Mater Hospitals, Dublin, Ireland;9. University Medical Center, Pointe-à-Pitre, France;10. American University of Beirut Medical Center, Beirut, Lebanon;11. Medical Center, Ljubljana, Slovenia;12. Hospital Clinic — IDIBAPS, Barcelona, Spain;13. Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen, Thailand;14. Instituto Nacional de Cardiologia, Rio de Janerio, Brazil;15. CHU Nancy-Brabois, Nancy, France;p. Canberra Hospital, Woden, Australia;q. Pontchaillou University Hospital, Rennes, France
Abstract:Emerging debates on anti-racism within white majority cultures centre emotion and affect to explore the visceral nature of racialised encounters that unfold in public spaces of the city. This paper builds on such understandings by conceptualising whiteness as a force that exerts affective pressures on bodies of colour who are hypervisible in public spaces. I show that these pressures have the potential to wound, numb and immobilise bodies affecting what they can do or what they can become. This paper argues, however, that affective energies from human and non-human sources are productive forces that are also sensed in public spaces such as the suburban beach. These energies entangle sensuous bodies with the richness of a more-than-human world and have the potential to offer new insights into exploring how racially differentiated bodies live with difference. The paper draws on ethnographic research conducted in Darwin, a tropical north Australian city at the centre of politicised public debates on asylum seeker policy, migrant integration and Indigenous wellbeing. My attention to affective pressures and affective energies contributes to understanding how bodies with complex histories and geographies of racialisation can inhabit a world of becoming.
Keywords:Affective energies  Australia-Darwin  Indigenous and migrant bodies  Suburban beach  Whiteness
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