Having trouble reading this email? View it in your browser.

Wesleyan | Center for the Humanities

MONDAY NIGHT LECTURE SERIES | MOBILITIES

Surface and Subjectivity: Navigating the Pan American Highway in Panama

Rosa Ficek
Surface and Subjectivity: Navigating the Pan American Highway in Panama

The road that connects Panama City to the country’s eastern province highlights the connections between modernization and colonization: it is the centerpiece of projects of state expansion that enabled migrant peasants to settle the frontier and facilitated commerce in support of economic development. It is also part of the Pan American Highway, an effort to link the countries of North and South America by road, a dream of hemispheric modernity that is based on—and reproduces—social hierarchies forged through colonial encounters. This lecture considers the possibility of mobility without modernity (and just maybe without coloniality) by tracing people’s travels and engagements with this unfinished highway as it was partly constructed in the 1970s, abandoned, and then rehabilitated in the 2000s. It focuses on the highway’s lively, uneven surface in order to understand the unevenness of subjectivities caught up in relations of governance. While roads may organize landscapes by arranging heterogeneity according to modern logics, everyday mobilities enacted from positions of difference point to ways of being connected that do not conform to the categories and subjectivities put forth by the state. These highway movements work alongside projects of governance and development, interfering with them in ways that loosen the powerful association of roads and progress.


MONDAY, APRIL 27, 2015  |  6 P.M.
DANIEL FAMILY COMMONS  |  USDAN UNIVERSITY CENTER

Facebook   Twitter  

Center for the Humanities · 95 Pearl Street , Middletown, CT 06459
www.wesleyan.edu/humanities