Abstract

In recent contributions to the emerging anthropology of infrastructure, the issue of agency often plays the role of the proverbial elephant in the room—an area that most scholars are reluctant to engage with. In this paper we highlight the implicit dichotomization between human and non-human that characterizes this body of literature. In so doing we approach the question of agency not as a subjective property emanating from a conscious self—what would be very much the way traditional anthropology has come to imagine animism. Rather, by turning such an understanding of agency on its head, we take the animacy of the in-between as the starting point from which life unfolds. According to Tim Ingold’s work on the subject, this view is consistent with the cosmologies of people traditionally described as “animists.” Yet unlike conventional understandings of the term, Ingold describes this ontology as an openness to a world in becoming. Here what brings things into existence is not an animating principle inscribed within them, but rather the potential of the field of relations in which they are embedded. We suggest that this analytical reversal can provide us with a novel framework for the analysis of infrastructures. Accordingly, we argue that roads’ doings cannot be understood as active subjectivity or a function of their material resilience. Instead of connecting, roads should be understood as growing out of connections—as an “in-between” in which their doing is also their undergoing. We will make this argument through ethnographic cases from Pakistan, Nepal, China, Myanmar, and Austria.

Highlights

  • In recent contributions to the emerging anthropology of infrastructure, the issue of agency often plays the role of the proverbial elephant in the room—an area that most scholars are reluctant to engage with

  • Trying to explain the impact of the Karakoram Highway on Gilgit-Baltistan (Pakistan), Sherbaz Ali Bercha used the following metaphor: “When you open the window to air your room,” he told Alessandro during a hot summer day in his office in the Gilgit Library, “fresh air will come in; but with it,” he added, “mosquitos, pollution, and dust will make their way into the house.”

  • In 2014, during a workshop in Berlin, as Alessandro was trying to convey this range of emotions through the case of the Karakoram Highway, he was accused—rather benevolently —of “road animism:” of treating the road as an agent, a subject capable of doing things

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Summary

Introduction

In recent contributions to the emerging anthropology of infrastructure, the issue of agency often plays the role of the proverbial elephant in the room—an area that most scholars are reluctant to engage with. Trying to explain the impact of the Karakoram Highway on Gilgit-Baltistan (Pakistan), Sherbaz Ali Bercha used the following metaphor: “When you open the window to air your room,” he told Alessandro during a hot summer day in his office in the Gilgit Library, “fresh air will come in; but with it,” he added, “mosquitos, pollution, and dust will make their way into the house.”. Infrastructures such as roads have a great impact on the lives of people in all corners of the world. To put it a different way, the road’s doing is its undergoing (Ingold 2015: 125)—a perspective that challenges classic opposition between the active and the passive

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