TY - JOUR
T1 - Sparks from the friction of terrain: Transport animals, borderlands, and the territorial imagination in China
AU - White, Thomas
N1 - Funding Information:
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: The writing of this article was supported by an Economic and Social Research Council research grant (ES/W005433/1).
Funding Information:
An early version of this article was presented in June 2022 at a panel on Infrastructure Development and Nonhuman Co-Existence at the Asian Borderlands Research Network conference in Seoul, and at the workshop Infrastructure and the Animal at the University of Fribourg in September 2022. I would like to thank participants, and my co-organizer Emilia Sulek, as well as Agnieszka Joniak-Lüthi, for their suggestions. I am grateful to Franck Billé, Ed Pulford, Alessandro Rippa, and Michael Vine for reading drafts of the article, and for their helpful comments. Any outstanding errors or omissions remain my own. The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: The writing of this article was supported by an Economic and Social Research Council research grant (ES/W005433/1).
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2023.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Representations of the friction of terrain play a significant role in the production of the territorial imagination in contemporary China. As infrastructure and its attendant promises are rolled out to once-remote corners of the nation, the state has sought to memorialize the heroic experience of the friction of terrain during the Chinese Revolution and subsequent projects of territorial incorporation in Inner Asia, before the proliferation of durable infrastructure. At the same time, even as the Chinese state deploys increasingly high-tech, disembodied means to police its borders, representations of charismatic transport animals used to patrol select sections of these borders have circulated in various media. This article argues that the mobility of animal bodies is deployed to produce a distinctive form of territorial imagination in China, one which foregrounds the friction of terrain at certain sites, and conjures up state fantasies of interspecies relations as/and interethnic friendship. While much recent scholarly literature focusses on the collocation of infrastructure and state power, this article calls for attention to the ways in which states can also mobilize representations of selected sites of roadlessness, and concomitant animal-based mobilities.
AB - Representations of the friction of terrain play a significant role in the production of the territorial imagination in contemporary China. As infrastructure and its attendant promises are rolled out to once-remote corners of the nation, the state has sought to memorialize the heroic experience of the friction of terrain during the Chinese Revolution and subsequent projects of territorial incorporation in Inner Asia, before the proliferation of durable infrastructure. At the same time, even as the Chinese state deploys increasingly high-tech, disembodied means to police its borders, representations of charismatic transport animals used to patrol select sections of these borders have circulated in various media. This article argues that the mobility of animal bodies is deployed to produce a distinctive form of territorial imagination in China, one which foregrounds the friction of terrain at certain sites, and conjures up state fantasies of interspecies relations as/and interethnic friendship. While much recent scholarly literature focusses on the collocation of infrastructure and state power, this article calls for attention to the ways in which states can also mobilize representations of selected sites of roadlessness, and concomitant animal-based mobilities.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85164363730&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/02637758231184881
DO - 10.1177/02637758231184881
M3 - Article
SN - 0263-7758
VL - 41
SP - 433
EP - 450
JO - ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING D
JF - ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING D
IS - 3
ER -