Metabolic Strata, Corporeal Sediment

IF 1.2 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Environmental Humanities Pub Date : 2023-11-01 DOI:10.1215/22011919-10746056
Andrea Marston
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Abstract

This article explores the uneven geosocial traces created by transcontinental and corporeal circulations of tin ore, metallic tin, and tin cans from the mid-nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries. Although tin has no essential relationship to human life, I argue that the extraction, circulation, and consumption of tin have nevertheless contributed to the production of metabolic unevenness across continental space. Since the early industrial era, tin has been used primarily for food preservation, in which capacity it has nutritionally supported the metabolic processes (and labor power) of workers, settlers, and soldiers, among others. Tin canning technologies relied, in turn, on the relentless labor of tin miners, whose own metabolic processes were interrupted by the accumulation of mineral dust in their lungs. These histories have been archived as geosocial strata as both discarded tin cans and pulmonary fibrosis. Drawing insights from geophilosophy and both Marxian and toxicological approaches to metabolism, this article reflects on how inhuman forces and substances subtend not only life but also its disparate energies and exposures.
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代谢层,肉体沉积物
本文探讨了 19 世纪中叶至 20 世纪中叶锡矿石、金属锡和锡罐的跨洲和肉体流通所造成的不均衡的地理社会痕迹。虽然锡与人类生活没有本质上的关系,但我认为锡的开采、流通和消费还是造成了跨大陆空间的新陈代谢不均衡。自早期工业时代以来,锡主要用于保存食物,它为工人、移民和士兵等人的新陈代谢过程(和劳动能力)提供了营养支持。锡罐头技术反过来又依赖于锡矿工的不懈劳动,他们的新陈代谢过程因肺部积聚矿尘而中断。这些历史已作为废弃锡罐和肺纤维化的地质社会地层存档。本文从地缘哲学以及马克思主义和毒理学的新陈代谢方法中汲取灵感,反思非人的力量和物质如何不仅影响生命,而且影响其不同的能量和暴露。
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来源期刊
Environmental Humanities
Environmental Humanities HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
8.70%
发文量
32
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊最新文献
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