Destructive care

There is a growing awareness of the essential similarities between care and maintenance notions in more-than-human settings. Whereas the concept of care is increasingly extended towards non-living organisms, research on maintenance and repair still focuses mainly on technologies and infrastructu...

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Main Author: Anna Varfolomeeva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies 2021-04-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
Online Access:https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/njsts/article/view/3539
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spelling doaj-7c094f8463204d56b91584dca1ed7d532021-04-27T13:16:10ZengNordic Journal of Science and Technology StudiesNordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies1894-46472021-04-0191Destructive careAnna Varfolomeeva0School of Advanced Studies, University of Tyumen There is a growing awareness of the essential similarities between care and maintenance notions in more-than-human settings. Whereas the concept of care is increasingly extended towards non-living organisms, research on maintenance and repair still focuses mainly on technologies and infrastructures. This article extends the realm of maintenance theorizing towards humans' caretaking activities and discusses the concepts' parallels. It focuses on the case study of Veps ethnic minority in Karelia, Northwestern Russia. Since the 18th century, Veps have been extracting rare ornamental stones: gabbro-diabase and raspberry quartzite. The article demonstrates that Veps workers engage in close bodily and material interactions with the mining industry. Whereas many of them enter into affective relations with the stone, their attitudes towards their bodies and health become estranged and detached. The article introduces the concept of "destructive care" to analyze the process of the workers' growing alienation from their bodily needs. Through the Veps' example, the article demonstrates that the logics of care and maintenance become entangled in the realm of human – material co-existence. https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/njsts/article/view/3539
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Varfolomeeva
spellingShingle Anna Varfolomeeva
Destructive care
Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
author_facet Anna Varfolomeeva
author_sort Anna Varfolomeeva
title Destructive care
title_short Destructive care
title_full Destructive care
title_fullStr Destructive care
title_full_unstemmed Destructive care
title_sort destructive care
publisher Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
series Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
issn 1894-4647
publishDate 2021-04-01
description There is a growing awareness of the essential similarities between care and maintenance notions in more-than-human settings. Whereas the concept of care is increasingly extended towards non-living organisms, research on maintenance and repair still focuses mainly on technologies and infrastructures. This article extends the realm of maintenance theorizing towards humans' caretaking activities and discusses the concepts' parallels. It focuses on the case study of Veps ethnic minority in Karelia, Northwestern Russia. Since the 18th century, Veps have been extracting rare ornamental stones: gabbro-diabase and raspberry quartzite. The article demonstrates that Veps workers engage in close bodily and material interactions with the mining industry. Whereas many of them enter into affective relations with the stone, their attitudes towards their bodies and health become estranged and detached. The article introduces the concept of "destructive care" to analyze the process of the workers' growing alienation from their bodily needs. Through the Veps' example, the article demonstrates that the logics of care and maintenance become entangled in the realm of human – material co-existence.
url https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/njsts/article/view/3539
work_keys_str_mv AT annavarfolomeeva destructivecare
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