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Title: Border Crossings
Author: Cindy Milstein
Date: 2002(?)
Language: en
Topics: identity, movement

Cindy Milstein

Border Crossings

That which is avant-garde has always transgressed the boundaries of what

is considered decent. Yet after the “shock of the new” has worn off,

what was once widely perceived as subversive is often viewed by many as

socially acceptable if not desirable. Anarchism, ever bohemian due to

its utopian edge — even if anarchists see their principles as eminently

applicable to the vast majority of peoples’ lives — continually throws

itself against the next brick wall as soon as the previous one comes

tumbling down. At least to date, then, the praxis of anarchism has

voluntarily loitered at the border regions of society, remaining

outrageous, but seeing with every new frontier a sense of possibility.

For anarchists and other radicals, this can at times form the backdrop

for a productive production. From the 1950s onward, new types of social

movements challenged lines etched by everything from colonialism and

racism to patriarchy and heterosexism. The uncertainty created by such

border crossings has frequently been generative not just of civil unrest

and the casting off of old masters but more expansive articulations of

liberation. For example, by various movements pressing against the

limits of what it means to love or be sexual, “sexuality” as a category

was enlarged to include gays and lesbians, then stretched to embrace

bisexuals and later transsexuals, and recently further pried open by the

contestation of “gender” as a binary concept. Even if heterosexism is

far from eradicated, many peoples’ lived experience has improved; even

if still confining, more social space has been created for greater

self-determination around intimate issues such as partnerings,

sensuality, and kinship.

Then too, creative borrowings across borders is a defining feature of

the contemporary anti-capitalist movement. The phrase “Our resistance is

as transnational as capital” has itself become transnational — a

copyright-free good to be used by all. Indeed, a clever idea at one

demonstration or an innovative organizing strategy whisks around the

world, to be playfully altered in an array of diverse locales and then

reinvented elsewhere. There are now a rainbow of blocs at protests;

home-made shields at direct actions are crafted out of materials ranging

from inner tubes to giant shellacked photos of global youth; and

encuentros have beget consultas have beget grassroots social forums, if

an exact lineage can even be traced. In this mutualistic economy of the

imagination, we gladly share our ideas for globalizing freedom without

need of trade agreements, without asking for bills of sales, national

identification cards, or passports. And so it is that we cobble together

a movement of movements without borders, all the while asserting that

“another world is under construction,” as activists did at a recent

gathering before the Europe without Capital mobilization in Barcelona.

But whether figurative or literal, borders are places of displacement,

marking out danger and potentiality in equal measure. For many, they

signify trauma; a better life often isn’t waiting on the other side. And

more than ever, border crossings both geographic and cultural, material

and emotional, are becoming compulsory points of no return for millions

due to forces beyond their control.

The legacy of the anti-authoritarian Left could theoretically offer a

framework to boldly approach and contest the legitimacy of the new,

confusing divides being erected on a plethora of fronts. It could help

ease the passage for those forced into migration and indicate a sense of

home ahead. Anarchists, however, seem more comfortable causing

disruptions at the old, familiar checkpoints — those guarding, say,

culture or forms of resistance. Not that such disruptions aren’t

necessary, especially dynamic ones; the best of radical artists retool

when their creations become toothless. Still, the taboos and truisms of

what is understood as “anarchism” unfortunately stand sentinel at the

gates of our own promise to be much more relevant to many more people,

in many more arenas. This would entail the discomfort of trudging

through those barriers we’ve so far largely ignored.

Such disease with one’s place in the world isn’t necessarily a matter of

choice. The tragedy being writ large on the global stage has broken down

the boundaries between those who are displaced, the displacers, and

those with a miniscule space of their own. All perform overlapping,

frequently destructive if not deadly roles, and it is less and less

clear who to applaud and who to boo in the improvisation titled

“Globalization.” For like the migration of transnational resistance, the

much larger migration of peoples and commodities (and people as

commodities) across all sorts of uncharted territories has in certain

ways unhoused us all.

The current battle over national borders — the effort to maintain an

increasingly elusive and illusory national identity — is one case in

point. Here, the displaced and the displacers, and those effected by

both, all wrestle to define who has a right to a home in the alleged

homeland. Whether fought with rocks or bullets, suicide bombers or

ballot boxes, this is less a turf fight between or within states than it

is about who belongs to “my people.” It is a struggle over who counts as

“us” versus “them” based on various and variously contrived criteria of

authenticity such as race, religion, or historical injustices. It is a

war without winners that alleges, like George W., that there are those

who do good (us) and those who do evil (them), and no coexistence

between such opposites is possible.

Yet the very act of naming these dualisms — never neatly contained to

begin with — indicates that they are at risk of dissolving altogether.

The displacements, hybridities, and interdependencies that globalization

is making apparent, if not exacerbating, are eroding what meager ground

was left for such bipolar thinking. That could offer hope for

transnational identities, a qualitative humanism based equally on

solidarity and differentiation. But in a world that affords little

security for much of humanity, holding fast to one’s “people,” however

fraught with contradictions, at least supplies the veneer of home. Such

is the foundation, for example, of a nouveau fascism that transgresses

the contours of Nazism. Suddenly, it’s “rad to be trad” in the

Netherlands, where culturally liberatory sexuality bonds with

politically racist ideology in a refashioned far Right.

The parameters of today’s barbarism must be recognized in order to be

fought, and that entails addressing its own barrier-breaking logic; how,

for one, it feeds on many peoples’ genuine concern over the loss of

community and individuality — such that in the Netherlands at least, the

xenophobe can be queer. Countering such an ugly avant-garde before its

notions become normative requires that we too straddle previously

noncontiguous spaces. For instance, in a United States permeated by

racism, perhaps anarchism’s antistatism should openly grapple with the

necessity of certain forms of national identity as meaningful though not

sufficient to people of color in their struggle for freedom (or as

Ashanti Alston argues in the spring 2002 issue of Onward, “Beyond

nationalism, but not without it”). Attempting such thorny trespasses

might just determine whether we continue to play in the refuse of

capitalist society, always at its fringes, or can instead offer a

semblance of refuge to those made vulnerable at its many points of

migrations.