Artery

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781478031406

Racial Ecologies on Colombia's Magdalena River

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By Austin Zeiderman
Imprint:
DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
450 g
Pages:
277

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Description

Austin Zeiderman is Associate Professor of Geography at the London School of Economics and author of Endangered City: The Politics of Security and Risk in BogotA, also published by Duke University Press.

Preface ix Acknowledgments xiii Introduction. Race, Nature, and Logistics in Fluvial Colombia 1 1. Arterial Currents 23 2. Dredging Up the Future 51 3. Securing Flow 83 4. In the Wake of Logistics 115 5. Madre Magdalena 147 6. Navigating Racial Ecologies 175 Afterword 209 Bibliography 217 Index 241

"Through lucid ethnography along Colombia's Magdalena River, Austin Zeiderman shows how attempts to forge a fluvial 'logistics corridor' revive and sustain racial and spatial difference. With deep sensitivity to the human and nonhuman life that traverses these terraqueous environs, Zeiderman offers a deft critique of the fetishisms of logistics and of governable supply chains and their smooth flow, revealing logistics to be aleatory and extremely lucrative, unpredictable and deeply contradictory." - Sharad Chari, author of (Apartheid Remains) "Going upstream on Colombia's Magdalena River has occasioned many great stories, and Austin Zeiderman's is an inordinately skilled wayfinding into the conjoined circulations of race and nature on a river constantly remade and remaking the life worlds engaged with it, now in concert with new logistical imaginaries. Yet the materialization of these imaginaries results in uncertain dispositions amid the terraqueous cadences of exploitation and inventiveness, local vernaculars and imported technicities, capture and autonomy, whose unpredictable proportions require skilled navigation from us all." - AbdouMaliq Simone, author of (The Surrounds: Urban Life within and beyond Capture) "Through the story of a river, multiple social, geopolitical, and environmental scales of racialization, gendering, and class formation are revealed. Artery is replete with the rich particularities of place, personhood, and intricate networks of human and other-than-human relations assembled through regional association and driven apart by spatial hierarchies. Simultaneously attentive to the scars of colonization and the often subtle and occasionally stark changes brought about by transformations in conditions of labor and increasing global connectivity, the narrative is equally concerned with struggles for liberation and the possibilities of living otherwise. Astute and compelling." - Hazel V. Carby, author of (Imperial Intimacies: A Tale of Two Islands)

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