ESSAY META-NARRATIVE

Text

In 2018, the president of Ecuador announced the closure of the Ecuadorian Space Institute. The Institute operated out of a space station in Cotopaxi, Ecuador that was constructed by NASA in 1956 as part of the first U.S. satellite tracking network – the Minitrack Network. Since its installation during the early years of the Cold War, the Cotopaxi space station has filtered through various names, institutional affiliations, and functions. After NASA withdrew their operations in 1981, the space station was absorbed into Ecuador’s Center for Integrated Survey of Natural Resources by Remote Sensing (CLIRSEN). Under CLIRSEN, the space station became a government institution dedicated to the production of satellite data utilized by the Ecuadorian security forces.

This exhibit traces the fungible and contested nature of the space station. How has technology moved between NASA and Ecuadorian military forces? What colonial imaginaries are at play in state narratives that portray Ecuador as undeserving of space exploration? How do academic, military, and governmental infrastructures interact to both expand and limit our hermeneutic horizons?

License

Creative Commons Licence

Contributed date

August 19, 2019 - 1:16pm

Critical Commentary

Essay meta-narrative

Cite as

Anonymous, "ESSAY META-NARRATIVE", contributed by Jessica Slattery and Jorge Nunez , STS Infrastructures, Platform for Experimental Collaborative Ethnography, last modified 19 August 2019, accessed 7 May 2024. https://stsinfrastructures.org/content/essay-meta-narrative