An Anthropogenic Table of Elements: Experiments in the Fundamental

An Anthropogenic Table of Elements: Experiments in the Fundamental

An Anthropogenic Table of Elements: Experiments in the Fundamental

An Anthropogenic Table of Elements: Experiments in the Fundamental

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Overview

An Anthropogenic Table of Elements provides a contemporary rethinking of Dmitri Mendeleev’s periodic table of elements, bringing together "elemental" stories to reflect on everyday life in the Anthropocene.

Concise and engaging, this book provides stories of scale, toxicity, and temporality that extrapolate on ideas surrounding ethics, politics, and materiality that are fundamental to this contemporary moment. Examining elemental objects and forces, including carbon, mould, cheese, ice, and viruses, the contributors question what elemental forms are still waiting to emerge and what political possibilities of justice and environmental reparation they might usher into the world.

Bringing together anthropologists, historians, and media studies scholars, this book tests a range of possible ways to tabulate and narrate the elemental as a way to bring into view fresh discussion on material constitutions and, thereby, new ethical stances, responsibilities, and power relations. In doing so, An Anthropogenic Table of Elements demonstrates through elementality that even the smallest and humblest stories are capable of powerful effects and vast journeys across time and space.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781487563561
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Publication date: 11/17/2022
Series: Technoscience and Society
Pages: 246
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.80(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Timothy Neale is a DECRA senior research fellow and senior lecturer in Anthropology at Deakin University.
Courtney Addison is a lecturer in the Centre for Science in Society at Te Herenga Waka, Victoria University of Wellington.
Thao Phan is a postdoctoral research fellow at the ARC Centre of Excellence on Automated-Decision Making & Society and the Emerging Technologies Research Lab at Monash University.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Timothy Neale, Courtney Addison, and Thao Phan

1. 1080
Courtney Addison

2. Carbon
Timothy Neale

3. Cement
Eli Elinoff

4. Cheese
Xenia Cherkaev, Heather Paxson, and Stefan Helmreich

5. Copper
Manuel Tironi

6. Ice
Alexis Rider

7. Kerosphere
Émélie Desrochers-Turgeon, Ozayr Saloojee, and Zoe Todd

8. Lithium
Scott Wark

9. Mould
Alison Kenner and Sarah Stalcup

10. Mylar
Derek P. McCormack

11. Seeds
Xan Chacko

12. Sperm
Janelle Lamoreaux and Ayo Wahlberg

13. Strontium
Brad Bolman

14. Tectonics
Zeynep Oguz

15. Testosterone
J.R. Latham and Kate Seear

16. Virus
Frederic Keck

17. Elements-to-Come
Thao Phan

Contributors
Index

What People are Saying About This

Cymene Howe

"Through provocations challenging innateness and foundational forms, An Anthropogenic Table of Elements invites us to think and feel more capaciously about the elements that compose, inflect, and refract across our mutual worlds. A must-read collection for the emergent elemental turn in the human sciences and more-than-human studies."

Andrea Ballestero

"Immerse yourself in this open-ended catalogue and move through the fantastic itineraries of the elemental it proposes. Yearnings for possibility within the elemental forces of our time — colonialism, extractivism, racism, capitalism — will be attended to. This is a table of elements geared towards times to come, anticipating its own transformation by offering a notion of elementality that emphasizes recombinatory capacities. This book is a wonderful methodological and political achievement that sparks the imagination, ignites new connections, and keeps the fire of political commitments alive."

Hannah Landecker

"Looking at landscapes, bodies, and relations shot through with mining and endocrine disruptors and fires, this volume turns not to the keywords of the twentieth century, but to the elements of the twenty-first. A wide-ranging set of things and connections unfolds from the question of the unit of inquiry and narrative in an anthropogenic world. By turns sober and creative, this group of accomplished writers plays with and on the periodic table of elements to analyse forms and formations of the element, in social life, in social science, and in the scientific and experiential work of living in a world in which every natural thing is socially and materially shaped by colonialism, industry, and technological activity. The result is writing that settles somewhere in the space between the essay and the assay: curious, experimental, informative."

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