Category Archives: Sensing (In)Security: New Materialism and The Politics of Security

Thinking of security through sensing invites us to move beyond abstract notions of power, protection, or control, and instead to ask how security feels, where it resides, how it appears, and how it is experienced through the material world around us, through the relational interplay of spirit and matter, subjectivity and objectivity; how we feel it as citizens and anthropologists.

This feature will delve into diverse ethnographic examples, exploring how material and sensory dimensions of security manifest in various contexts, challenging conventional understandings and opening new avenues for anthropological inquiry. The essays in the feature trace how the sensory is mobilized to maintain or subvert orders of control across settings as diverse as Rome’s Roma camps, Mozambique’s protest mobilizations, Denmark’s urban margins, and the entry halls of houses in Brazil’s urban middle-class neighbourhoods.

Tessa Diphoorn and Tomas Salem: Introduction: Sensing (In)Security. New Materialism and The Politics of Security

Palm Springs, mid-September 2025. The American flag flies at half-staff across the city in honour of Charlie Krik, right-wing political activist and Trump supporter who was shot and killed in Utah at the beginning of the month. While gun violence is not foreign to Americans, the assassination of Kirk is met with shock, anger, and […]