ABSTRACT

There is broad acceptance across the Humanities and Social Sciences that our deliberations on the social need to take place through attention to practice, to object-mediated relations, to non-human agency and to the affective dimensions of human sociality. This Companion focuses on the objects and materials found at centre stage, and asks: what matters about objects?

Objects and Materials explores the field, providing succinct summary accounts of contemporary scholarship, along with a wealth of new research investigating the capacity of objects to shape, unsettle and exceed expectations. Original chapters from over forty international, interdisciplinary contributors address an array of objects and materials to ask what the terms of collaborations with objects and materials are, and to consider how these collaborations become integral to our understandings of the complex, relational dynamics that fashion social worlds.

Objects and Materials will be of interest to students and scholars across the social sciences and humanities, including in sociology, social theory, science and technology studies, history, anthropology, archaeology, gender studies, women’s studies, geography, cultural studies, politics and international relations, and philosophy.

chapter 1|17 pages

Objects and materials

An introduction

part I|84 pages

Material qualities

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 4|11 pages

The material construction of state power

Artifacts and the new Rome

chapter 5|11 pages

The material politics of solid waste

Decentralization and integrated systems

chapter 6|10 pages

From stone to god and back again

Why we need both materials and materiality

chapter 8|11 pages

Decay, temporality and the politics of conservation

An archaeological approach to material studies

part II|80 pages

Affective objects

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 9|10 pages

Boxing films

Sensation and affect

chapter 10|9 pages

Tactile compositions

chapter 11|16 pages

Bodies and cadavers

chapter 12|12 pages

Domination and desire

The paradox of Egyptian human remains in museums

chapter 13|6 pages

A dream of falling

Philosophy and family violence 1

chapter 14|11 pages

Sarah Kofman's father's pen and Bracha Ettinger's mother's spoon

Trauma, transmission and the strings of virtuality

chapter 15|10 pages

Spectral objects

Material links to difficult pasts for adoptive families

part III|63 pages

Unsettling objects

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 17|11 pages

The fetish of connectivity

chapter 18|10 pages

Useless objects

Commodities, collections and fetishes in the politics of objects

chapter 20|10 pages

How things can unsettle

part IV|76 pages

Interface objects

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 22|9 pages

True automobility

chapter 23|12 pages

The environmental teapot and other loaded household objects

Reconnecting the politics of technology, issues and things

chapter 24|10 pages

Interfaces

The mediation of things and the distribution of behaviours

chapter 25|9 pages

Idempotent, pluripotent, biodigital

Objects in the `biological century'

chapter 26|11 pages

Real-izing the virtual

Digital simulation and the politics of future making

chapter 27|10 pages

Money frontiers

The relative location of euros, Turkish lira and gold sovereigns in the Aegean

part V|86 pages

Becoming object

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter 30|11 pages

Objects made out of action

chapter 31|10 pages

Quantitative objects and qualitative things

Ethics and HIV biomedical prevention

chapter 32|11 pages

Potentialities and possibilities of needs assessment

Objects, memory and crystal images

chapter 33|10 pages

Digital traces and the `print' of threat

Targeting populations in the war on terror

chapter 34|11 pages

Intangible objects

How patent law is redefining materiality

chapter 36|10 pages

What documents make possible

Realizing London's Olympic legacy