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Full Description
The Idea of Waste starts with the premise that waste is inevitable in human society. It explores how we have grappled with both the material reality and the spectre of this shape-shifting phenomenon throughout history - utilizing it, dreaming of overcoming it, yet never escaping it. John Scanlan investigates what waste is and why it seems to be intrinsic to human life, at every turn, in every age and epoch. He demonstrates how waste never disappears completely but rather only proliferates anew. The compelling narrative shows waste to be both an enduring material consequence of human activity and an idea or state of being.
Contents
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