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Being En Route
Authors:SUSAN BIBLER COUTIN
Institution:Department of Criminology, Law, and Society, School of Social Ecology, University of California–Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697
Abstract:Through an ethnography of unauthorized migration from El Salvador to the United States, I explore "clandestinity" as a hidden, yet known, dimension of social reality. Unauthorized migrants who are en route to the United States have to make themselves absent from the spaces they occupy. When they become clandestine, such migrants embody illegality; in some cases, they literally "go underground" should they die and be buried en route. Because their presence is prohibited, unauthorized migrants do not fully arrive even when they reach their destinations. There are parallels between the ways that migrants are present in yet absent from nations, and the ways that ethnographers are present in yet absent from the field. This ethnography of migrants en route therefore suggests how anthropological knowledge practices also produce realities that are hidden, yet known.
Keywords:knowledge  clandestinity  immigration  El Salvador  the United States
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