ABSTRACT

In a globalizing world, frontiers may be in flux but they remain as significant as ever. New borders are established even as old borders are erased. Beyond lines on maps, however, borders are spatial zones in which distinctive architectural, graphic, and other design elements are deployed to signal the nature of the space and to guide, if not actually control, behaviour and social relations within it. This volume unpacks how manipulations of space and design in frontier zones, historically as well as today, set the stage for specific kinds of interactions and convey meanings about these sites and the experiences they embody. Frontier zones organize an array of functions to facilitate the passage of goods, information, and people, and to define and control access. Bringing together studies from Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Europe, and North America, this collection of essays casts a wide net to consider borders of diverse sorts. Investigations of contemporary political frontiers are set within the context of examinations of historical borders, borders that have existed within cities, and virtual borders. This range allows for reflection on shifts in how frontier zones are articulated and the impermanence of border emplacements, as well as on likely scenarios for future frontiers. This text is unique in bringing together a number of scholarly perspectives in the arts and humanities to examine how spatial and architectural design decisions convey meaning, shape or abet specific social practices, and stage memories of frontier zones that no longer function as such. It joins and expands discussions in social science disciplines, in which considerations of border practices tend to overlook the role of built form and material culture more broadly in representing social practices and meanings.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

The Dialectics of Borders

part I|71 pages

The Border as a Line through Space

chapter 1|13 pages

Division and Enclosure

Frankie Quinn's Peaceline Panorama Photographs

chapter 2|14 pages

Occupying No Man's Land in the Lenné Triangle

Space, Spectacle, and Politics in the Shadow of the Berlin Wall

chapter 3|20 pages

Remaking the Edges

Surveillance and Flows in Sub-Saharan Africa's New Suburbs

chapter 4|22 pages

Imagining and Staging an Urban Border

The Role of the Netherbow Gate in Early Modern Edinburgh

part II|85 pages

Border Buildings

chapter 5|20 pages

House Number 1

The Vienna Hofburg's Multiple Borders

chapter 7|28 pages

Bordering on Peace

Spatial Narratives of Border Crossings between Israel, Jordan and Egypt

chapter 8|16 pages

The View from Above

Reading Reunified Berlin

part III|71 pages

Spatial Ambiguity and (Dis)Embodied Memory

chapter 9|18 pages

Gorizia and Nova Gorica

One Town in Two European Countries

chapter 10|20 pages

New Urban Frontiers

Periurbanization and (Re)territorialization in Southeast Asia

chapter 11|18 pages

Mediterranean Frontiers

Ontology of a Bounded Space in Crisis