This book is about waste and its inevitability in human culture and society.
Waste could be said to be one of the universal conditions of human existence, albeit one most often kept at bay or on the fringes of awareness. Waste: On the Limits of Human Life looks at its subject within the long perspective necessary to come to terms with how it has existed as a shapeshifting presence that seems to attach itself to human life at every turn, in every age and epoch.
Reaktion Books (UK)
University of Chicago Press (US)
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‘There is such a fine Montaignesque scope to On Garbage ... [a] little masterpiece ... Scanlan [is] an essayist of the first order […] for those who wonder how the species that rises to the horrendous occasions of September 11, 2001, or the recent tsunami, searching for body parts at Fresh Kills Landfill or sorting through corpses for signs of life; how the same human kind could look away from famine and holocaust, Rwanda and Darfur, Scanlan’s inquiries cast some light among the shadows in the dark. Like a wide-eyed miner up from the underworld, what he tenders in On Garbage looks like gold.' — Thomas Lynch, The Times
Reaktion Books (UK)
University of Chicago Press (US)
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George Kubler in his book The Shape of Time elaborates an idea of “aesthetic fatigue” that might serve to encapsulate much of what, in this volume, seems to be characteristic of waste — its relation to time, to energy, to modernity’s desire for evermore perfect designs and forms of living — and to why we discard the past and the stuff that once adorned our world.
Overfamiliarity, Kubler suggests, makes us tired of the way the world looks; it makes the world itself look tired. “Waste,” as this book aims to show, is a multifaceted phenomenon …
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