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Finite Media
Environmental Implications of Digital Technologies
2017 || Paperback || Sean Cubitt || Duke University Press
While digital media give us the ability to communicate with and know the world, their use comes at the expense of an immense ecological footprint and environmental degradation. In Finite Media Sean Cubitt offers a large-scale rethinking of theories of mediation by examining the environmental and human toll exacted by mining and the manufacture, use, and disposal of millions of phones, computers, and other devices. The way out is through an eco-political media aesthetics, in which people use m...
Plantation Life / 1st edition
Corporate Occupation in Indonesia's Oil Palm Zone
2021 || Paperback || Tania Murray Li e.a. || Duke University Press
In Plantation Life Tania Murray Li and Pujo Semedi examine the structure and governance of Indonesia's contemporary oil palm plantations in Indonesia, which supply 50 percent of the world's palm oil. They attend to the exploitative nature of plantation life, wherein villagers' well-being is sacrificed in the name of economic development. While plantations are often plagued by ruined ecologies, injury among workers, and a devastating loss of livelihoods for former landholders, small-scale inde...
The Right to Maim
Debility, Capacity, Disability
2017 || Paperback || Jasbir K. Puar || Duke University Press
In The Right to Maim Jasbir K. Puar brings her pathbreaking work on the liberal state, sexuality, and biopolitics to bear on our understanding of disability. Drawing on a stunning array of theoretical and methodological frameworks, Puar uses the concept of “debility”-bodily injury and social exclusion brought on by economic and political factors-to disrupt the category of disability.
She shows how debility, disability, and capacity together constitute an assemblage that states use to cont...
Reclaiming the Discarded
Life and Labor on Rio's Garbage Dump
2018 || Paperback || Kathleen M. Millar || Duke University Press
In Reclaiming the Discarded Kathleen M. Millar offers an evocative ethnography of Jardim Gramacho, a sprawling garbage dump on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro, where roughly two thousand self-employed workers known as catadores collect recyclable materials. While the figure of the scavenger sifting through garbage seems iconic of wageless life today, Millar shows how the work of reclaiming recyclables is more than a survival strategy or an informal labor practice.
Rather, the stories of catad...