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The Design Politics of the Passport

Materiality, Immobility, and Dissent

Mahmoud Keshavarz (University of Gothenburg, Sweden.)

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English
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
20 February 2020
The Design Politics of the Passport presents an innovative study of the passport and its associated social, political and material practices as a means of uncovering the workings of ‘design politics’. It traces the histories, technologies, power relations and contestations around this small but powerful artefact to establish a framework for understanding how design is always enmeshed in the political, and how politics can be understood in terms of material objects.

Combining design studies with critical border studies, alongside ethnographic work among undocumented migrants, border transgressors and passport forgers, this book shows how a world made and designed as open and hospitable to some is strictly enclosed, confined and demarcated for many others - and how those affected by such injustices dissent from the immobilities imposed on them through the same capacity of design and artifice.
By:  
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   410g
ISBN:   9781350143081
ISBN 10:   1350143081
Pages:   184
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Mahmoud Keshavarz is a postdoctoral researcher at the Engaging Vulnerability Research Program, Uppsala University, Sweden.

Reviews for The Design Politics of the Passport: Materiality, Immobility, and Dissent

Mahmoud Keshavarz’s original and evocative book, The Design Politics of the Passport, blasts conventional design studies out of the water, brilliantly exposing design’s role in making a world that contains and controls certain subjects more than others. * Alison J. Clarke, Chair of Design History and Director of the Papanek Foundation at the University of Applied Arts, Vienna, Austria * In this provocative book, Mahmoud Keshavarz puts into question reigning notions of critical design, national identity, illegality, forgery, and much more. He does this by unravelling a seemingly mundane designed artefact: the passport, shifting attention from the design of passports to what passports design as they act in the world. As such, this is an exemplary study of ontological designing in action, and an important book for thinking the inter-relation of design and politics. The sharp theoretical analysis is grounded in, and enriched by, case studies of the effects of regimes of passporting on individual lives. The Design Politics of the Passport is timely in its address to the uneven distribution of rights of movement in a world where political, economic and climatic catastrophes are compelling increasing numbers of people to be on the move. * Anne-Marie Willis, Visiting Professor of Architecture at the University of Adelaide, Australia * In this exciting and conceptually ambitious study, Mahmoud Keshavarz gives new meaning and substance to such well established concepts as the production of space and the diagram of power. By examining with incisive care and precision the co-articulations of space and power through the artefact of the passport, this book's interrogation of the politics of design and the design of power offers a refreshing and path-breaking perspective on the materiality of bordering and im/mobiilty. * Nicholas De Genova, Professor and Chair of the Department of Comparative Cultural Studies, University of Houston, USA * An original and much-needed contribution to design history that skilfully interweaves critical theory with political histories of migration, while ensuring that the lived human experience remains at the core of the study... Keshavarz is to be commended for an engaging and provocative book that succeeds in communicating historical and contemporary experiences of migration, as well as illuminating critical issues that are largely underrepresented in design history. * Sabrina Rahman writing in the Journal of Design History *


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