Placed Selves: The Spatial Hermeneutics of Self and Other in the Postunification Berlin Police

Author: Glaeser Andreas  

Publisher: Routledge Ltd

ISSN: 1363-0296

Source: Social Identities, Vol.4, Iss.1, 1998-02, pp. : 7-38

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Abstract

On the basis of ethnographicdata gathered during 11 months of field study in two east German police precincts, four processes of identity construction are analysed which link selves to space and thereby to one of the main aspects of material culture. These processes are (1) the tropic (as opposed to literal) reading of space, producing a complex web of identifications through a play of metonymy, synecdoche, metaphor, ellipsis and hyperbole; (2) the writing of space as a material inscription of self in small spatial contexts such as neighbourhoods, cities and regions; (3) the placement of self into larger spatial wholes such as neighbourhoods, cities and regions; (4) the anchoring of life-stories and narrated life experiences in significant time-space combinations or chronotopes. The paper argues that identities are not only constructed in interaction with other actors but also in 'dialogue' with material culture and spatial practices. It argues also that the spatial dimension of identity brings to the fore the fact that identities are not only knowable, but that they can be experienced. Through space, identities become sensualised.