Abstract

Thinking at the scale of the Anthropocene highlights the significant burden on all life imposed by the residues of industrialization as well as continued pollution. But it also risks a disconnect between the functioning of planetary atmospheres and the functioning of local airs. In this thought-piece, we consider together the potato chip bag, the asthma inhaler, and climate positive building design as scalar practices of Anthropocene air. By figuring Anthropocene air as an interscalar vehicle, we show connections between matter and relations that seem distant and disconnected. We do this by honing in on respiration as a transformative atmospheric process that has been designed in advanced capitalism to extend life for some, while denying life for others. We point to seconds, hours, days, weeks, and seasons to highlight how containment technologies and respiratory processes function in the Anthropocene to remake air. These technologies and practices, which all too often go unnoticed in consumption landscapes, demonstrate that despite Anthropocene air’s tendency to exceed human agency, it is liable to engineering. Doing this offers insight into where different scales of action can be mobilized.

Highlights

  • As STS scholars concerned with the Anthropocene demonstrate, containment highlights the politics of containing, an analytic move that we extend in this paper by thinking through Anthropocene air

  • Surfaces, practices, and even politics ordered and articulated, within Anthropocenic frameworks that have gotten us to this place and that are offered as a way to get ‘us’ out of it? Each of the three cases we examine show how air has been engineered in the Anthropocene to solve problems of time: the fading quality of potato chips; the overwhelming speed of medication delivery; and the inability to use outdoor spaces due to seasonal change

  • This paper emerged from the 2018 Anthropocene Campus Melbourne and the Anthropocene Campuses that preceded it

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Summary

Cultural Studies Review

Citation: Kenner, A., Mirzaei, A., Spackman, C. 2019. Breathing in the Anthropocene: Thinking Through Scale with Containment Technologies. Cultural Studies Review, 25:2, 153-171. https://doi.org/10.5130/ csr.v25i2.6941 ISSN 1837-8692 | Published by UTS ePRESS | https://epress. lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index. php/csrj

AN ELEMENTAL ANTHROPOCENE
Trapping Time in the Envelope
Community Comfort Zones
Breathing with Medicated Containers
Conclusion
Findings
Works Cited
Full Text
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