The Spectacle of Killing: Shifts in Stance Before US State Violence at Mexico’s Northern Border

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Rihan Yeh

Abstract

At the US-Mexico border, US immigration officers kill Mexican citizens with some regularity. This essay explores ethnographically how, on the Mexican side of the border, spectators of this violence take different stances in relation to it. In Tijuana, a city which shares the border with San Diego, California, many residents represent themselves as part of a local “we” that excludes migrants to the United States, since, in contrast to migrants, they hold documents permitting them legal access to the neighboring country. Faced with US state violence, however, they may begin to represent themselves as potential victims alongside migrants, and their stance in relation both to the US state and to migrants may shift. Through analysis of three people’s use of language for positioning themselves, along with a detailed reading of a video that conjoins linguistic with spatiotemporal stancetaking, the essay shows how the tijuanense “we” can expand in face of violence, opening space for new solidarities and identifications that, I argue, destabilize the transnational social order.

Article Details

How to Cite
Yeh, R. (2023). The Spectacle of Killing: Shifts in Stance Before US State Violence at Mexico’s Northern Border. Revista Stultifera, 6(2), 117–151. https://doi.org/10.4206/rev.stultifera.2023.v6n2-06
Section
Artículos del Dossier
Author Biography

Rihan Yeh, Universidad de California, San Diego, Estados Unidos.

Rihan Yeh es Doctora en Antropología Sociocultural por la Universidad de Chicago; actualmente trabaja en la Universidad de California, San Diego.