About us
Borderlands
Studies Center
The Center has been established
by a team of researchers: Professor Grazyna Zygadlo and Dr. Marek Wojtaszek
from the Department of American Studies and Mass Media, Faculty of
International and Political Studies, University of Lodz, Poland. The Center is committed
to promoting and advancing interdisciplinary research of the contemporary
borderland territories of various kinds and nature. Its mission will be to
coordinate transdomain connections that bring together the humanities, social
sciences and the arts into a powerful synergy of research, creative expression
and innovation, thus animating and facilitating scholarly dialogue, and communication
between academics, artists and students from all over the world. Pioneering in
the Polish context, the Center will also invite and foster digital
communication and scholarship, as well as performance and exhibition, thereby
enabling greater public engagement and outreach, and facilitating knowledge
transfer to new generations of students and researchers.
Focus of studies:
Inter-, transdisciplinary
and transversal research into borderlands, which addresses, but is not limited
to, such areas and problems as:
- theories and methodologies of borderlands and the in-between liminal spaces (e.g. frontiers, boundaries, peripheries, thresholds, sites of passing, zones of intensive contact);
- cartographies of demarcation, separation and seclusion, as well as inclusion and integration (e.g. urban, cultural, social, psychological, corporeal);
- border as a specific social and political space (formation of national and regional identities; emerging and escalating conflicts and their resolution, nationalism and transnationalism; border crossing, mobility and migration);
- symbolic borders (e.g. communication at/through/over the borders, representation of borderlands – cinematic, theatrical, literary);
- cultural geographies and spatialities of borderlands (e.g. processes of ex-/extra-/de-/re-territorialization, limits, interstices, intervals);
- ecologies of mobility, passing/crossing and being stuck, and (non)belonging;
- aesthetics of liminality (e.g., ruins, margins, finalities, non-normativities, disabilities);
- artistic expressions and interventions (e.g., architectures, designs, visual cultures).
Goals and activities:
- Conducting scientific research and publishing the outcomes;
- Applying for grants and other sponsorship of academic activities to local and international science funding bodies;
- Organization of thematic workshops, expert panels, and conferences;
- Developing teaching curriculum (courses, seminars) in the area of borderland studies, and didactically contributing to the programs taught at the Faculty;
Building a platform
for interinstitutional dialogue, discussion and exchange of knowledge for
academics, students, and artists interested in the subject of borderlands.
Activity:
On 22 February 2025, Dr. David Schrag delivered an online lecture: “In Their Death Throes. The Necroculture of Arms Trafficking and Human Smuggling on US-Mexican Border”, looking into the militarization process of US-Mexican border and focusing on the Texan border town of Laredo on Rio Grande. Prof. Scharg works in the Center for Global Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and his research interests combine cultural anthropology and international studies. He has published on prison education and American gun culture. In February, he joined a residency program at the Jewish Museum in Berlin. The event was co-organized by the University of Lodz Borderland Studies Center and Political Critique in Warsaw.
Contact details
Borderlands Studies Centre
- Narutowicza 59A () 90-130 Łódź