Methodologies for Living with Toxicity
To join today’s session – please register here
WiSER and the Institute for Advanced Studies (IAS) at the University of London UCL warmly invite you to the next seminar in our online series:
Breathing In: Air and Atmospheres
Gala Rexer will speak on
Methodologies for Living with Toxicity:
Polluting Infrastructures and Environmental, Reproductive and Racial Injustice in North London
Click here for paper
In this exploratory paper, I invite you to visit the Edmonton Waste Incinerator in North London. Since 2020, climate justice and Black Lives Matter activists have been campaigning against the expansion of this already polluting infrastructure. The incinerator currently burns about 500,000 tons of waste a year and its fumes release lead, mercury, and ultra-fine particulate matter into one of London’s poorest neighborhoods. Physicians contesting the plans to expand the incinerator have presented the adverse health outcomes this will have for newborns and pregnant people, while local politicians warn of long-term public health consequences. Discussing these findings, I illustrate how air pollution – past, present, and projected – needs to be conceptualized through an intersectional lens, as environmental, reproductive, and racial injustice. Secondly, given the latency and accumulation of pollution and toxicity in the human body, I ask if (and how) we can witness the unfolding of “slow violence” of polluting infrastructures as they are being built and rebuilt. Drawing from anti-colonial science and technology studies and queer ecology, I argue that living with toxicity complicates how we study health inequalities.
Gala Rexer is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the University of Warwick’s Sociology Department. Before that, she was Lecturer in Race, Ethnicity and Postcolonial Studies at UCL’s Sarah Parker Remond Centre. Her work draws from the fields of feminist and queer theory, anti-colonial thought, and global and medical sociology, and has appeared in Ethnic and Racial Studies, Body and Society, Comparative Sociology, and The Sociological Review Magazine. Her first book, “Demographic Anxieties: Bodies, Borders, and Reproductive Injustice in Israel/Palestine” is under contract with the University of California Press.
Monday, 24th June 2024
4pm (Johannesburg time)
Register here
The series is convened by Isabel Hofmeyr and Sarah Nuttall (WiSER) and Megan Vaughan (IAS).
Recent work on infrastructures, atmospheres and the biospheric shifts associated with conditions of the Anthropocene have relied on rendering newly vivid those aspects of the social which have long been treated as background. Sensory ecologies - affective or experienced space which compose environments, in Matthew Gandy’s terms, are synesthetic: like sounds, they reverberate within human and more-than-human subjects. Affective atmospheres are shared bodily situations, drawing also on renewed and shifting elemental understandings of air and refracted light. How can we come conceptually closer to the toxicities of both air pollution and rising authoritarianisms, to material and metaphoric atmospheres – and other less-than-visible carriers of damage? And to a better sense of the entanglements and relationalities that such modes of thought can produce? The growing non-transparency of air, in Sumana Roy’s terms, produces paranoid reading: suspicious, anticipatory theories of negative affect. This occurs in the context of the ‘disappearance of air’ in favour of mask filters, air purifiers and the AQI (Air Quality Index) for those who can afford it. Yet there may also be a reparative range to these questions: making air explicative might offer analytic opportunities for sustenance and responsiveness to what is to come.
The Series runs fortnightly on Mondays @ 4-5pm JHB time /3pm London time. It builds on ongoing and emergent academic attention to air and atmospheres and draw out suggestions for future research and for ways of acting upon the contemporary air and atmospheric crisis.