This article argues for a theoretical extension in anthropology from the po
st-Cartesian depiction of body and mind as one (rather than as separable) t
o the idea that this composite body-mind can be regarded as enmeshed in soc
ial trails created by the movement of objects. Movements of persons therefo
re occur with or in relation to the objects to which people attach themselv
es. Such everyday movements need to be contrasted with those dramatically r
esulting from forcible human displacement, in which refugees, for instance,
take what items they can both for immediate practical use but also in orde
r either to re-establish or re-define personal and collective origins. The
article concludes by suggesting that, as mementoes of sentiment and cultura
l knowledge and yet also as bases of future re-settlement, the 'transitiona
l objects' carried by peoples in crisis inscribe their personhood in flight
but offer the possibility of their own de-objectification and re-personali
zation afterwards.