@inbook{c090a6a4cec544dd8ed9a53f74354ff6,
title = "Threat and suffering: the liminal space of 'The Jungle'",
abstract = "In 2009 French authorities demolished and cleared an informal shelter in Calais known as {"}the Jungle{"}. British national press constructed this as a rational response to the problem of illegal migration. Crucial to this justification was the metaphoric use {"}The Jungle{"} to describe the descent into anarchic degradation which spilt out into surrounding spaces of civility. This metaphor facilitated the use of a pseudo-rational discourse in which the appropriate policy response to (physical and moral) threat was to expel the other, demolish {"}The Jungle{"} so deal forcibly with the illegal migrants. Within this pseudo-rational discourse the issue of immigration becomes a liminal space between rationality and atavism in enlightened societies.",
keywords = "Communication, cultural and media studies, border controls, illegal migrants, media, refugees, trafficking",
author = "Anita Howarth and Yasmin Ibrahim",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780415668842",
series = "Routledge studies in contemporary geographies of leisure, tourism, and mobility",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "30",
pages = "200--216",
editor = "Hazel Andrews and Les Roberts",
booktitle = "Liminal landscapes",
address = "United Kingdom",
}