Toxic sights: the spectacle of hazardous waste removal
Balayannis, A
Date: 20 January 2020
Journal
Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This paper examines the geographies of hazardous waste removal. Over the past decade,
studies of disposal have demonstrated the myriad ways in which things can never disappear –
they can only be transformed, transmuted, combusted, combined or any other manner of
material change. This paper aims to develop understandings of the ...
This paper examines the geographies of hazardous waste removal. Over the past decade,
studies of disposal have demonstrated the myriad ways in which things can never disappear –
they can only be transformed, transmuted, combusted, combined or any other manner of
material change. This paper aims to develop understandings of the material politics of disposal
by considering the matter of representation. It does this ethnographically, by following a
chemical stockpile though the process of removal from its storage site in coastal Tanzania. In
examining everyday disposal practices, this paper highlights the materialities of hazardous
waste in ways that have been epistemologically side-lined. Locating the analysis at the
intersection of matter and representation, the paper illustrates the centrality of paper-work,
diagrams, photographs, and standard operating procedures in performing removal. It argues
that removal is achieved through a bureaucratic spectacle; a process which obscures lingering
residues and compounds their toxic effects. By attending to chemicals through the mundane
work of removal, this paper opens up different lines of inquiry for studies of waste, and enriches
understandings of materiality by considering how visual representations operate and make a
difference.
Geography - old structure
Collections of Former Colleges
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0