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Robert Frost's ambivalence: Borders and boundaries in poetic and political discourse
Institution:1. Department of Geography, 673 Auditorium Road, Geography Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824-1117, USA;2. Department of History, Morrill Hall, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824-1036, USA;1. Kroc School of Peace Studies, University of San Diego, 5998 Alcalá Park, San Diego, CA 92110, USA;2. Centre on Conflict, Development & Peacebuilding, Graduate Institute of International & Development Studies, Geneva, Switzerland;3. Institute for Economic Policy and Centre for Applied Economics (CSEA), Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Via Necchi n. 5, 20123 Milano, Italy;1. School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, UK;2. School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies, University of Bristol, UK;3. Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, UK;4. Department of Politics, Languages & International Studies, University of Bath, UK;5. Department of History, University of Bristol, UK
Abstract:Phrases from Robert Frost's well-known poem “Mending Wall” are often used to frame discussions of borders in academic and political discourse. Used by some to justify the construction of physical barriers, others have used excerpts from the poem to fundamentally question the truism it appears to project. In light of recent interest in borders, our paper returns to Frost's full poem and its contexts in order to define, theorize, and critically mobilize what we take to be a useful ambivalence regarding fences. We use Frost's formulations to address the universal difficulty of moving beyond the borders of our daily lives, whether imposed at the edges of the nation-state, inscribed in our social relations, or inferred within the formal dimensions of a poem. Working at the crossroads of political geography, psychoanalytic theory, and literary analysis we argue that addressing the central role of borders in our lives and Frost's deep ambivalence about fences and borders is a useful step in any political and aesthetic movement forward. We cannot be “good neighbors” in other words or even good co-inhabitants until and unless we acknowledge that we are ambivalent not only toward the Other, but also about the very concept of borders and boundaries itself. Ideas presented about ambivalence provide border scholars and political geographers with an opportunity to re-evaluate our positionality and recognize how our own humanity intersects with that of others.
Keywords:Boundaries  Bordering  Robert Frost  Poetry  Psychoanalysis  Ambivalence
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