Abstract From 4S Conference_Waste Disposal 2

Text

Waste Pickers and Invisible Labor in the Infrastructure of Recyclable Waste in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Kathrin Eitel, Institute for Cult. Anthropology & European Ethnology, Goethe-University,

Frankf Waste is patterning streets and sewage systems in urban Phnom Penh, Cambodia. It’s omnipresent and pervasive. Waste pickers collect what they find valuable and sellable or reproducible from the ways and paths, looping around dirty and smelly quarters. Without Phnom Penh’s waste pickers, recyclable waste would sustain in streets. This infrastructure of recyclable waste is, as a lived infrastructure, highly visible in Phnom Penh’s streets and stands against Star’s assumption of break-down visibility of infrastructures (Bowker/Star 2000). I argue, that even though this infrastructure is on the surface, physically in the streets of Phnom Penh, visible, it stays at the same time blurry and hidden, insofar as other citizens or policy don’t recognize them as a full-visible person with a “proper” and massively important job. Moreover, this infrastructural service stays unquestioned and is taken for granted. This leads me further to my assumption that not only infrastructures of recycling waste are sociocultural invisible but also the labor remains as a further aspect of it hidden. Eventually, the network of multiple infrastructures on recyclable waste and the network within them are influenced by different actors, as it is waste and waste pickers but also labor (Marx/Dobb/Ryazanskaya 1981) and in the area of interactions between others (Barad 2007, Dolphijn/van der Tuin 2012). My contribution to STS is therefore to question the idea of infrastructure as a structure graspable from only one perspective/ontology. Secondly, I’d like to bring the aspect of (un-)human labor as an essential actor to let infrastructure function and live into account. Methodologically I am using praxeographical approaches, ethnographical methods, like participant observation and interviews as well as mental maps and thick descriptions. Further, I’m following Star's (2016) suggestion on how to infrastructure and Larkin's (2013) inputs on politics and poetics of infrastructure.

License

Creative Commons Licence

Creator(s)

Contributors

Contributed date

January 30, 2019 - 9:49pm

Critical Commentary

This is one of the abstracts from the 4S conference 2018 held at Sydney. I am collating these abstracts to understand and be informed about the different aspects involved in municipal waste disposal.

Language

English

Cite as

Kathrin Eitel, "Abstract From 4S Conference_Waste Disposal 2", contributed by Aarti Latkar, STS Infrastructures, Platform for Experimental Collaborative Ethnography, last modified 3 March 2019, accessed 22 November 2024. https://stsinfrastructures.org/content/abstract-4s-conferencewaste-disposal-2