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An Address in Paris

Emplacement, Bureaucracy, and Belonging in Hostels for West African Migrants

Aïssatou Mbodj-Pouye

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English
Columbia University Press
07 November 2023
"After West African migrants arrived in France in the 1960s, the authorities opened residences for them known as ""foyers."" Initially intended to contain the West African population, these hostels for single men fostered the emergence of Black communities in the heart of Paris and other cities. More recently, however, a nationwide renovation program sought to replace the collective living arrangements of foyers with more individualized spaces by constructing new buildings or drastically reshaping existing ones-and casting the West African presence as a threat to French identity.

Aïssatou Mbodj-Pouye examines the changing roles that foyers have played in the lives of generations of West African migrants, weaving together rich ethnographic description with a critical historical account. She shows how migrants settled in foyers through kinship ties, making these buildings key parts of diasporic networks. Migrants also forged a sense of place in foyers, in an intricate relationship with bureaucratic requirements such as having an address. Mbodj-Pouye scrutinizes the physical and social evolution of foyers and the administrative dynamics that governed them. She argues that even though these buildings originated in state attempts to manage migrants along racial lines, the shared way of life that they encouraged helped spark a sense of political agency and belonging whose significance extends far beyond their walls.

Combining close attention to the social and cultural meanings of the foyers and keenly observed portraits of Black experiences in France across decades, An Address in Paris offers a new lens on the global African diaspora."

By:  
Imprint:   Columbia University Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 140mm, 
ISBN:   9780231211437
ISBN 10:   0231211430
Series:   Black Lives in the Diaspora: Past / Present / Future
Pages:   400
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Abbreviations Introduction Part I. Communities in the Making 1. Improvising the Foyers: Franco-African Institutions of Migration (1958–1967) 2. Modern Buildings: Political Challenges, Administrative Anxieties, and the Consolidation of the Foyer System (1968–1979) 3. Permanence and Decay: African Foyers, from Solution to Problem (1980s–1990s) Part II. Partial Endings 4. Tolerated Bonds: Living Together in the Foyers 5. When Will the Foyers End? Contentious Renovations and Temporal Disjunctions 6. Acknowledging Solidarity: Bureaucratic Relatedness, Hosting Practices, and Exclusionary Dynamics Part III. Ambivalent Attachments, Contested Belonging 7. Foyermen: Class, Gender, and Race Across Generations 8. Eroded Emplacement: Urban Incorporation, Containment Policies, and the Politics of Belonging 9. Focal Points: Reflections from the Foyers Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index

Aïssatou Mbodj-Pouye is a research fellow in anthropology at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique in Paris.

Reviews for An Address in Paris: Emplacement, Bureaucracy, and Belonging in Hostels for West African Migrants

Mbodj-Pouye's path-breaking book is an exquisite close reading of foyers in Paris. The residents of these dormitories, West African men, take center-stage as key interlocutors who have shaped and challenged state efforts to manage their homes and their bodies. An Address in Paris is precisely the kind of careful, empirical, and rigorous scholarship that demonstrates how race—as a social construct—necessarily intersects with other categories such as gender, space, and citizenship. -- Minayo Nasiali, author of <i>Native to the Republic: Empire, Social Citizenship, and Everyday Life in Marseille Since 1945</i>


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