Charles Heller
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Charles Heller's PhD research project
Liquid Trajectories: Documenting Illegalised Migration and the Violence of Borders
This PhD thesis offers an account of my trajectory as a researcher and aesthetic practitioner seeking to document and contest the violence of the migration regime operating between Europe and Africa. I describe the successive shifts my research and practice has undergone in a diary of practice of sorts.
Through my successive experiments with the use of a wide range of sensing devises ranging from photographs, videos, maps, satellite images and statistical graphs this thesis explores the intersection between the politics of migration and that of aesthetic practices. In the introduction to this thesis, I describe further my approach and inscribe it within broader theoretical fields.
In the second chapter, Image/Migration, I follow the lives of the images of migration I have produced as a documentary filmmaker, and enquire into their effects. Considering images as practices and objects which produce variegated effects depending on their use by different actors, I chart the way images depicting migrants precarious condition have become embedded in the government of migration.
In a third chapter, Forensic Oceanography, I present a collaborative research project aiming at documenting the deaths of migrants in the Mediterranean Sea and accounting for the conditions which have led to them. I engage with the complex geography of the EUs maritime frontier and seek to reappropritate some of the tools normally used for surveillance such as mapping and remote sensing so as to reinscribe responsibility in a sea of impunity.
In a fourth chapter, Tactical Statistics, I explore the potential of a critical statistical practice to register the violence of the European migration regime, which operates indirectly and leads to deaths on a structural basis. In a concluding chapter, For Movement, I discuss the conditions for thinking alternatives to the current migration regime in the form of a policy and right to universal freedom of movement.
Charles is a member of Roundtable two.