The remembrance of dismembered bodies

the promise and challenge of mourning in the southwestern borderlands

Authors

  • Bryan Ellrod Wake Forest University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.22145

Keywords:

Borderlands, migration, ethics, aesthetics, political theology

Abstract

For nearly three decades, the United States has pursued a border security strategy that has precipitated the deaths of thousands of migrants. Most of these deaths transpire unseen in remote stretches of the Sonoran Desert, where individuals are reduced to disarticulated bones. Endeavoring to overcome political indifference to these deaths, religious leaders, artists, and activists have joined in public works of mourning. These works strive to lend visibility to an otherwise invisible crisis and to grieve otherwise ungrieved lives. Thus, they usher the dead back into the polis and confound the boundaries between insiders and outsiders. However, the effort to re-present the dead runs the risk of making a spectacle out of the violence perpetrated against migrant bodies, inuring us to their witness or, worse, eliciting a perverse enjoyment. This article seeks first to offer a theological justification for political acts of mourning, before going on to articulate a strategy for resisting the dangers implicit in the remembrance of dismembered bodies.

Author Biography

  • Bryan Ellrod, Wake Forest University

    Bryan M. Ellrod is a graduate of Emory University’s Graduate Division of Religion. His research engages questions of membership, identity, and responsibility at the intersections of religion, law, and politics. He is currently serving as the Postdoctoral Fellow in Leadership and Character for Pre-Law Professions at Wake Forest University.

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Published

2022-11-23

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Ellrod, B. (2022). The remembrance of dismembered bodies: the promise and challenge of mourning in the southwestern borderlands. Body and Religion, 5(2), 204–221. https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.22145