Encountering Bureaucracy, Imaginaries, and Address: Understanding Citizenship through Lived Lives
Abstract
The vast majority of approaches to ‘citizenship as status’
see the concept as static and often use binary modes of
categorisation and analysis, such as that between citizen and
non-citizen. These accounts are problematic on several fronts;
firstly, they obscure the diversity of encounters that occur in
the context of citizenship, and secondly, they regard the concept
as relatively unchanging. By focusing on the ways that
citizenship is encountered within lived lives, this thesis
provides a novel approach to the study of citizenship that can
better grasp the fluidity as well as the transformative
capacities of the emergent encounters that make up individuals’
ongoing negotiations of citizenship.
Using fifty in-depth qualitative interviews conducted in
Australia and Greece with multiple citizenship status holders, I
interrogate the ways in which encounters with bureaucracy,
imaginaries and acts of imagination, as well as encounters of
address, create, shape, and rupture conceptions of citizenship as
status. More specifically, by applying an alternative
methodological approach and highlighting the role of both
repetition and rupture, this thesis illustrates, in the first
instance, how these transformative encounters with bureaucracy
are more than just ‘gates’ that one passes through, but how
they resonate far beyond their immediate contexts. Secondly, in
building on the literature on the subject of imaginaries, I
consider the diversity of ways in which citizenship comes to be
imagined, and the importance of seeing these acts of imagination
as both personal and collective, while retaining the
possibilities of non-determinist outcomes. Finally, I interrogate
the role and impact of addressing and being addressed in the
context of citizenship, and the ways that these speech acts come
to situate us within the world, but also how they account, at
least in part, for the ceaseless transformations of citizenship
itself. This thesis illustrates how it is through such ongoing
and personal negotiations, that citizenship emerges within lived
lives.
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