Author Archives: Adam Matthew Mikhail

Adam Matthew Mikhail is a PhD student in anthropology at the CUNY Graduate Center. His research examines the Strait of Gibraltar as a politico-ecological space where maritime labor, ecological change, and border surveillance shape enactment and contestation of sovereignty at sea.
Vue aérienne du port de pêche de Tanger-Ville. Les installations portuaires et les quais sont entourés d’une digue. Au loin, un porte-conteneurs navigue dans le détroit de Gibraltar. La côte espagnole se profile à l’horizon.

What the Map Conceals: Sovereignty and the Sea in the Strait of Gibraltar

An aerial view of the Strait of Gibraltar shows something that resembles order. Container ships move in two disciplined lanes, their wakes parallel lines across the surface. Between them, a single patrol vessel sits like a traffic cop at an intersection. Smaller ships move differently: ferries on fixed schedules, fishing boats angling across the grain, following lines invisible from above. The Strait, fourteen kilometers at its narrowest, appears split down the middle, dividing Morocco from Spain, Africa from Europe. Deleuze and Guattari (1987) described the sea as the exemplary smooth space—fluid, directionless, resistant to the grid—but also as the first place to be striated, ruled into navigable geometry by technologies of longitude and open-water navigation. From above, the striae of the strait are clear. The question is what that striation conceals. (read more...)