Melancholy Borders
Mobility, Migration, and Exclusion in Global History
Meha Priyadarshini editor Owen Miller editor Andrew B Liu editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Columbia University Press
Publishing:9th Jun '26
£30.00
This title is due to be published on 9th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

A major contribution to the burgeoning field of global migration history, this book explores the historical clash between transnational networks of migrant mobility with state attempts to control them. Showcasing the latest research in the field, Melancholy Borders brings together a wide range of scholarship that illuminates the crucial role played by migration and migration regulation in the creation of the modern world.
Taking inspiration from the scholarship of historian Adam McKeown (1965–2017), contributors push migration history beyond its long-standing focus on the North Atlantic by spotlighting transnational networks across the Americas, Africa, and Eurasia. At the same time, they demonstrate that consequent efforts to arrest the movement of people were foundational for the rise of the modern global order, international law, and the standardization of the nation-state. Nationalist efforts to restrict migration became a global phenomenon. Melancholy Borders presents case studies that offer different approaches to studying migration and its regulation, featuring conceptual richness as well as geographical and temporal diversity. This book at once marks the advances in the field of global migration history, takes stock of new directions, and opens up new trajectories for future research.
More than a tribute to the work of the late Adam McKeown, essays included in Melancholy Borders point to the many corners of the world where a modern tension between mobility and restriction illustrates contestations over power, freedom, and human autonomy not often captured in national treatments of immigration. -- Donna R. Gabaccia, general editor of The Cambridge History of Global Migrations
This timely and fitting tribute to an extraordinary scholar, teacher, mentor and friend offers a combination of personal reflections on Adam McKeown, critical discussions of his contributions to numerous fields, and new studies that show where his insights have led. It shows both the depth and the significance of global migration history. -- Anne Gerritsen, coeditor of Histories of Health and Materiality in the Indian Ocean World: Medicine, Material Culture and Trade, 1600-2000
ISBN: 9780231207195
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
376 pages