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The Idea of Waste: On the Limits of Human Life

Autor John Scanlan
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 apr 2025
A compelling rumination on detritus as an essential, meaningful, yet often problematic facet of human existence.
 
This book starts with the premise that waste is inevitable in human society—and ends with a meditation on its inevitability. The Idea of Waste explores how we have grappled with both the material reality and the specter of this shapeshifting phenomenon throughout history—utilizing it, dreaming of overcoming it, yet never escaping it. John Scanlan explores what waste is and why it seems to be intrinsic to human life, at every turn, in every age and epoch. Finally, he demonstrates how waste never disappears, but rather only proliferates anew. Scanlan’s compelling narrative shows waste to be both an enduring material consequence of human activity and an idea or state of being.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781836390343
ISBN-10: 1836390343
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 40 halftones
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: REAKTION BOOKS
Colecția Reaktion Books

Notă biografică

John Scanlan is a cultural historian at the University of Central Lancashire. His previous books include On Garbage and Memory: Encounters with the Strange and the Familiar, both published by Reaktion Books.

Cuprins

Introduction: Waste Is Life Plus Minus 1 Matter: Sewers, Filth and Sanitarians 2 Objects: Consume, Accumulate, Destroy 3 Resources: Reclaim, Recover, Recycle 4 Aesthetics: Designing and Dematerializing 5 Projections: Wastelands, Real and Imagined 6 Temporalities: Deep, Infinite and Meaningless Conclusion: Data Wastelands References Select Bibliography Acknowledgements Photo Acknowledgements Index

Recenzii

"In The Idea of Waste, Scanlan has produced yet another valuable think piece about ‘what waste is and what it has been.’ ‘It is about how we have lived with waste,’ he asserts, ‘made use of it as a thing or idea, and dreamt of escaping or conquering its negative effects once and for all.’ As usual, Scanlan offers a lot to chew on in this new book in a field that has seen amazing growth in recent years."

"Scanlan's new book reads like a historical and cultural anthropology of waste. It is an expansive excavation of the cultural middens—material, conceptual and virtual—of Western civilization. Drawing on works of politics, literature, industry, history, architecture and film, he reveals how waste occupies an ambiguous and shifting space between life (that which sustains, enriches and nourishes) and death (that which threatens, endangers or signifies disaster). Scanlan positions waste as central to our historical, cultural and existential fabric, taking us from the ancient sewers of Rome and medieval London, through Nadar’s documentation of Paris’s subterranean sewers to Walter Benjamin’s fascination with commodities and ruins, and from nuclear repositories and ecological wastelands to the digital detritus of our present moment."