In Transit #5
Tine Luk Meganck
ANCB, in collaboration with the ZEIT-Stiftung, invites protagonists from literature, sociology, arts and civil society for a conversation, a reading or a performance about land and territory, the concepts of ownership and translocation, protection and borders.
© ANCB
Date: Tuesday, 12 January 2021
Introduction
ANCB, in collaboration with the ZEIT-Stiftung, invites protagonists from literature, sociology, arts and civil society for a conversation, a reading or a performance about land and territory, the concepts of ownership and translocation, protection and borders. Some participants will also share their personal experience with exile, transit, inclusion and exclusion, longing and belonging, adding a special voice to these global, challenging and pressing themes.
This series is part of ANCB’s long-term programme Borders and Territories: Identity in Place, discussing the spatial consequences of geopolitical, socio-cultural, economic and ecological aspects of home, displacement, migration and identity in a transdisciplinary dialogue. It also represents a continuation of the project Transit Spaces in collaboration with the ZEIT-Stiftung.
Programme #5
Tuesday, 12 January 2021
Tine Luk Meganck, Assistant Professor at the Vrij Universiteit Brussel, in conversation with Benjamin Tallis, Policy Officer for Civilian Crisis Management, The European Centre of Excellence for Civilian Crisis Management (CoE), Berlin
In three dialogues within the In Transit series, Benjamin Tallis and his guests will look at how spaces of connectivity and community have been imagined, constructed and governed – and how they are being contested. Tine Luk Meganck and Benjamin Tallis will take the work of 16th century Flemish painter Pieter Bruegel the Elder as a starting point to discuss new approaches to understanding connectivity through cultural, material and visual politics and the connection between people and ‘their’ places – as well as who is being seen as out of place there. The conversation will provide new insights into the ways that landscapes have connected peoples and joined places together as spaces of governance.
Video © Reframe
In collaboration with:
ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin und Gerd Bucerius, Hamburg
Supported by:
Austrian Cultural Forum Berlin
Norwegian Embassy, Berlin
Danish Embassy, Berlin




