Abstract

ABSTRACT This article examines the role of hope in the stories of people with experiences of deportation collected during a photojournalistic research project following deportees from Europe. Drawing on the political philosophy of hope, specifically Ernst Bloch, this article explores the complex and ambiguous presence of hope and despair in the stories of deportees. Hope could present itself as denial, naïve optimism that everything will be fine, or as despair, a loss of hope. However, it also demonstrates itself in the persistence of not giving up hope for different futures. Building on Mariame Kaba’s abolitionist thinking, the article illustrates how this ‘discipline of hope’ emerges as a survival strategy that has prefigurative socio-political dimensions. In the stories of deportees, this ‘discipline of hope’ was evidenced at the level of both imagination and practice; as a way to escape the post-deportation ‘prison of one’s home’ or other unfavourable conditions people found themselves in. The interviewees’ persistence in moving despite the border regime’s violence reveals the system’s ultimate failure to work against humans’ aspiration to strive for better lives through mobility and points to the transformative nature of hope.

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