ABSTRACT

This book uncovers, explores and analyses the cultural and social factors and values that lie behind waste making, recycling and disposal in the Asia Pacific region, where impressive economic growth has led to significant increases in production, consumption and concomitant waste production.

This volume demonstrates the immense scope of waste as a multi-sectoral phenomenon, covering discussions on food, menstrual products, sewage, electronics, scrap, nuclear waste, plastics and even entire villages as they are submerged underwater by dam building, considered expendable in favour of economic growth. It discusses the wide range of approaches and contexts through which people interact with waste, including socio-economic analysis, participatory observation, laboratory science, art, video, installations, literature and photography. Case studies focusing on India, China and Japan, in addition to other regional examples, demonstrate the ubiquity of waste, materially and geographically. They reveal the multiple, sometimes contradictory, dimensions of waste: managing it can foster community building but can also exclude marginalized groups; waste can trigger innovative economic concepts and practices, but it can also pollute the oceans in large garbage gyres and it can wondrously change its nature from trash to useful components to new production, before being discarded once again.

This timely and wide-ranging collection of essays will be an important read for scholars, researchers and students in sustainability, development studies, discard studies, and social and cultural history, particularly focusing on countries in the Asia Pacific.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

Contemporary cultural perspectives on discards in the Asia-Pacific region

chapter 3|14 pages

Environment by, with, and for the citizens

Collective identity shaping the community-driven solid waste management in Kerala, India

chapter 6|20 pages

Becoming visible

An examination of Chen Qiulin's Farewell Poem (2002) and Jia Zhangke's Still Life (2006)

chapter 7|12 pages

Individually and collectively grieving the Fukushima dead at a waste-mountain

A reading of post-3/11 novel “Hikari no Yama [Mountain of Light]” by Japanese Monk-writer Genyu Sokyu 1

chapter 9|25 pages

Waste through different eyes

Multi-sited photovoice explorations

chapter 10|20 pages

Afterword

Planetary potlatch: scrutinizing the moral economy of recycling