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The Myth of What We Can Take In: Global Migration and the "Receptive Capacity" of the Nation-State
- Theory & Event
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Volume 22, Number 4, October 2019
- pp. 869-890
- 10.1353/tae.2019.0057
- Article
- Additional Information
Abstract:
This essay critiques a recently developed concept that sanctions violence against "irregular" migrants—namely, that the nation-state has a finite and objective "receptive capacity" for taking foreigners in. I first examine its origins in environmentalist conceptions of a territory's "carrying capacity"—a term that developed as a means of managing game populations and was subsequently transformed to appraise emerging markets. Second, I work through a linguistic recurrence, noting how Freud's theory of psychic injury postulates an infinite "receptive capacity" [Aufnahmefähigkeit], which must be regulated in order to ensure survival. Freud's speculations in Beyond the Pleasure Principle potentially dissolve a mythopoetic conception of Life that has since become central to the anti-immigrant racial imaginary—one that does not disavow death but strategically incorporates it and codes as annihilation the failure to organize one's own affectability profitably.