Full Description
This book analyses the dominant imagery related to migration and illustrates how framing of migrants as subjects viewed through the lens of the host gaze positions them for exclusion and marginalisation. It focuses on comparative sources derived from public and media visual campaigns focusing on migration issues. It illustrates how the ethical gap that the host-centric way of looking creates results in the growing suspicion of the migrant and how this ethical gap broadens and impacts on the legal exclusion of migrants as legal subjects.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: LAW AND THE ETHICS OF LOOKING
Chapter 1: The migrant in our gaze
Chapter 2: Looking, feeling, and judging the law
PART II: FIGURES OF THE MIGRANT
Chapter 3: The figures of a 'genuine' refugee and a 'bogus' asylum seeker.
Chapter 4: The spectre of the invisible illegal.
Chapter 5: The figure of the absolute other
Chapter 6: The migrant as an inhuman mass
Chapter 7
PART III: THE COMPLICITY OF THE PICTURE
Chapter 8: The challenge of navigating the ethics of law in the pictorial era
Conclusions
Bibliography



