articleAnnual Review of AnthropologyAug 28, 2013Closed access

The Politics and Poetics of Infrastructure

Columbia University · Barnard College

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Abstract

Infrastructures are material forms that allow for the possibility of exchange over space. They are the physical networks through which goods, ideas, waste, power, people, and finance are trafficked. In this article I trace the range of anthropological literature that seeks to theorize infrastructure by drawing on biopolitics, science and technology studies, and theories of technopolitics. I also examine other dimensions of infrastructures that release different meanings and structure politics in various ways: through the aesthetic and the sensorial, desire and promise.

Citation impact

3,768
total citations
FWCI
290.19
Percentile
100%
References
154
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biopower
  • Poetics
  • Politics
  • Sociology
  • TRACE (psycholinguistics)
  • Space (punctuation)
  • Materiality (auditing)
  • Power (physics)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Industry, innovation and infrastructure
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