Designing Disappearance
On the Cultural and Affective Histories of Waste
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22029/oc.2024.1464Keywords:
Affect Theory, Discard Studies, Cultural History, Political Aesthetics, Waste Design, Discard LiteratureAbstract
The _Essay explores affective and cultural legacies embedded in disposal architectures. Drawing on various theories of waste, it examines the material histories of domestic disposal and notions of affect and belonging. Central questions include how the design, function, and everyday use of disposal systems shape perceptions of waste; how these architectures relate to notions of citizenship; and how waste is perceived as either a social good or a mere trace of survival. In different literary and cultural contexts, the _Essay examines historically shaped distinctions between purity and pollution, necessity and excess, and structure and disorder through the lenses of Lauren Berlant's concept of intimate publics and cultural theories of wasteDownloads
Published
2024-10-31
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Section
_Essays
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Copyright (c) 2024 Laura Moisi
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.