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An Intimate Inventory of Race and Waste
Author(s) -
Vasudevan Pavithra
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
antipode
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.177
H-Index - 98
eISSN - 1467-8330
pISSN - 0066-4812
DOI - 10.1111/anti.12501
Subject(s) - materialism , environmental justice , capitalism , queer , race (biology) , sociology , politics , geopolitics , materiality (auditing) , innocence , state (computer science) , environmental ethics , perversion , gender studies , political science , law , aesthetics , epistemology , philosophy , algorithm , computer science
This article focuses on Badin, North Carolina, a segregated aluminum company town established in the early 1900s and site of a current environmental justice struggle. Racialised industrial toxicity operates through quotidian relations of care, corporate and state claims to innocence, and perversion of pleasurable environments. This affective and materialist inventory illustrates how race and waste intertwined in Badin to make aluminum vital and valuable. Drawing on critical race and postcolonial studies, feminist geopolitics, and science studies, this paper argues that intimacy is a crucial analytic for understanding racial capitalism as a political and ecological project in multiple spheres including the workplace, the home, the community and the landscape.

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