The Making and Burning of Borders – on Historicity, Storytelling, and Forensic Methods A Conversation

Authors
Publication date 2026
Host editors
  • Nina Lykke
  • Tara Mehrabi
  • Marietta Radomska
Book title Routledge International Handbook of Queer Death Studies
ISBN
  • 9781032504384
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9781003398486
Series Routledge International Handbooks
Chapter 16
Pages (from-to) 192-204
Number of pages 13
Publisher London: Routledge
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
Abstract
In her work, M'charek not only traces the social life of fact/fiction about crimes, suspects, and origin stories, but also skilfully engages with the historical amnesia in Europe about racial violence, the ethics of care, and the necropolitics of borders. Her work is an example of how race matters, and how storytelling about race and racialisation is always relevant, even when it comes to the sciences. From DNA-typing and familial searching to facialisation and caring for the bodies of drowned refugees, M'charek’s extensive ethnographic work on forensic sciences across multiple sites highlights the complexity of these sciences in terms of material-symbolic entanglements. This interview with M'charek, by Tara Mehrabi, unpacks the sociopolitical lives of forensic processes and the tentacularity of forensic constructs to show how race, gender, migration, and technoscience shape one another. The interview pays particular attention to the ever-presence of death and dead matter in M'charek’s work through a decolonial and posthuman feminist lens.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003398486-18
Downloads
The Making and Burning of Borders – on Historicity, Storytelling, and Forensic Methods_26_03_05_13_19_02 (Embargo up to 2026-04-30) (Final published version)
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