Building
Bridges, Not Walls: Bauman’s Reflections on the Present-Day ‘Migration Panic’
Zygmunt Bauman’s (2016) book, Strangers at Our Door, provides
a significant contribution to a growing discussion which counters the illusory
panics of mass migration. Bauman explores the origins, contours and the impact
of ‘moral panic’ seemingly spreading across Western, liberal democracies, and
dissects the present-day ‘migration panic.’ Such migration panic, he contends,
is witnessed within anxiety-driven and fear-suffused debates percolating within
Western societies. While moral panic is not a new concept—one in which
articulates that some malevolent force of ‘evil’ threatens a society’s
well-being, coupled with the anxieties ostensibly overwhelming felt within such
societies (c.f. Cohen, 1972)—what is new is the feeling of fear spreading among
an ever-growing number of people within Western nations.
While the book is relatively short in length, such
breadth does not reduce Bauman’s nuanced, complex and sophisticated analysis of
the arguably (in)secure times within which Western nations find themselves. As
Bauman rightly suggests, the stranger behind the door, and the perceived danger
such stranger brings, has always impacted society’s understanding of order and
control. How to interact with the stranger knocking on the doors of people’s
homes—whether to welcome them in or to lock them out—has been a pervasive
question since the beginning of time.
Indeed, our post-modern era is no exception to this.
Even as you read these words, such migrants are attempting now to seek refuge
from the violence of wars and the brutality of famished and/or impoverished lives.
Per Bauman, today Western nations find themselves confronted with an extreme
form of the “strangers in our midst” (Bauman, 2016, p. 9). Typically, the
people with whom we associate, are used to and cohabitate with in our
neighbourhoods, on our city streets and in our workplaces, are those we
experience predictable and familiar interactions with within similar manners.
Strangers, conversely, comprise the unknown; we know “much too little to be
able to read properly their gambits and compose our fitting responses—to guess
what their intentions might be and what they will do next” (Bauman, 2016, pp.
8-9). In effect, the anxiety of the unknown, coupled with Western citizens’
inability to deal with situations not of their own making or of their control,
causes fear and anxiety which can be exploited by politicians to benefit the
further ‘securitization’ of society. Such discussions of the West’s further
securitization have been an going focal point of contention several other works
argued by Bauman (c.f. Bauman 1993, 1995, 2006; Bauman & Donskis, 2013;
Bauman & Lyon, 2013).
The underlying message in Bauman’s book is one of its
greatest strengths: the fears and anxieties of the West will not be put to rest
if we separate ourselves from those unlike ourselves. Bridges, not walls, must
be built so that we may reach out and support those in need in these desperate
and hostile times: “the sole way out of the present discomforts and future woes
leads through rejecting the treacherous temptations of separation” (2016, p.
18). Indeed, the process of adiaphorization—namely, the ‘moral tranquilization’
of humans to refuse considerations of morally-driven social issues and to
actively participate in illusory objective neutrality—has been the linchpin of
Western, liberal democracies and the advent and continuation of late modernity
as we know it (c.f. Bauman 1993, 1995, 2006; Bauman & Donskis, 2013; Bauman
& Lyon, 2013). Such adiaphoric acts and discourses can entice Western
citizens to advocate for separation based on extant suspicions, animosities or
overarching indifference towards an-Other. Bauman insists we should not build
metaphorical walls or close doors based on “dissimilarities or self-imposed
estrangements,” but rather seek and take up the challenge of foreseeable
occasions in the future where Western nations will (inevitably) be brought into
a close and increasingly contact with ‘the strangers’ seeking refuge in our
lands (Bauman, 2016, p. 18). Such radical considerations may not bring an
instant relief to the West’s anxieties, and may trigger yet more fears and
further exacerbate “self-alienation, aloofness, inattention, disregard and, all
in all, indifference” (Bauman, 2016, p. 19). Nevertheless, the situation in
which humanity finds itself in 2016 is worrisome. In order to tackle such
crises of mass migration, global (in)security and fear-suffused
(socio-political) debates, humanity from all walks of life must overcome the
refusal of dialogue and the anxious and indifferent “mutual alienation” we have
in place, and instead encourage acts of solidarity and ongoing cooperation with
one another (Bauman, 2016, p. 19). While the waves of migrants progressing to
the West is unlikely to come to a halt, Bauman contends that by initiating and
developing dialogue which actively acknowledges humans as an interdependent
species, we may begin to turn the tide and tackle the sea of troubles
surrounding us.
Certainly, such a point is worth noting and should be
stressed. Conversation and ongoing dialogue must continue between all citizens
of the West, from debates between nation-states, to politicians, media outlets,
academics, policymakers, and all the laypeople in between. As Bauman indicates,
we should not resent the massive inflows of asylum seekers and refugees as these
people are not ones we should blame (if the act of ‘blaming’ is even a fruitful
endeavour from the outset); while these nomads may remind the West of its own
vulnerability and precarity within post-modernity and Western citizens’
fragility against the social, political, and economical “faraway forces of
globalization” and capitalism (Bauman, 2016, p. 17), to blame these “collateral
victims” of a heartless fate—not of their own choosing, one might add—is to further
exacerbate the migration panic. From a Baumanian perspective, to identify a
migration problem is to (a) securitize a migration panic which aids and abets
the intentions of actual terrorist organizations; (b) fuels and inflames
anti-Islamic sentiments within public and political discourses; (c) reduces the
chances of migrants to receive better life opportunities at the end of their
harrowing and traumatic journeys; and (4) allows terrorists to capitalize on
the dynamics of stigma implemented from (a) (b) and (c) (Bauman, 2016, pp.
38-46).
The anxieties and insecurities of our present-day reality
is a difficult pill to swallow; yet the current crisis of mass migration must
be faced. Bauman is essential in this point, as it is only through open doors
and dialogues are we to ease the anxieties driven by hyper-illusory and
ill-perceived fears of the stranger. While it is unclear whether we can ever
fully eradicate anxieties knocking on our door, Strangers at Our Door provides the metaphorical key needed to keep
doors (dialogical, physical, or otherwise) open for all walks of humanity
wishing to step through the threshold. This book calls upon us to be mindful of
the post-modern era in which we find ourselves, and to recognize and find new
ways to live together in solidarity and cooperation, amidst strangers who may
hold preferences and opinions different from our own.
References:
Bauman, Z. (2016). Strangers
at Our Door. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Bauman, Z. (2006). Liquid
Fear. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Bauman, Z. (1995). Life
in Fragments: Essays in Postmodern Morality. Cambridge: Blackwell
Publishers Inc.
Bauman, Z. (1993). Postmodern
Ethics. Cambridge: Blackwell Publishers Inc.
Bauman, Z., & Donskis, L. (2013). Moral Blindness: The Loss of Sensitivity in
Liquid Modernity. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Bauman, Z., & Lyon, D. (2013). Liquid Surveillance. Cambridge: Polity
Press.
Cohen, S.
(1972). Folk Devils and Moral Panics: The
creation of the Mods and Rockers. London: Routledge.
© Patrick Bailliu 2017
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten