ABSTRACT

Atlas of Material Worlds is a highly designed narrative atlas illustrating the agency of nonliving materials with unique, ubiquitous, and often hidden influence on our daily lives.

Employing new materialism as a jumping-off point, it examines the increasingly blurry lines between the organic and inorganic, engaging the following questions: What roles do nonliving materials play? Might a closer examination of those roles reveal an undeniable agency we have long overlooked or disregarded? If so, does this material agency change our understanding of the social structures, ecologies, economies, cosmologies, technologies, and landscapes that surround us? And, perhaps most importantly, why does material agency matter? This is the story of the world’s driest nonpolar desert, pink flamingos, and cerulean blue lithium ponds; industrial shipping logistics, pudding-like jiggling substrates, and monuments of mud; galactic bodies, radioactive sheep, and the yellowcake of uranium.

Put simply, this book dares readers to see the world anew, from material up. Atlas of Material Worlds offers this new relationship to our host environment in a time of mounting crises—accelerating climate change, ballooning socioeconomic inequality, and rising toxic nationalism—uniquely telling materialist stories for practitioners and students in landscape, architecture, and other built environment disciplines.

chapter |46 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|50 pages

Uranium

Big Bangs: Metal as Metaphor

chapter 2|50 pages

Tracing the Green Energy Paradox across Battery, Body, Landscape, and Cosmos

Tracing the Green Energy Paradox across Battery, Body, Landscape, and Cosmos

chapter 3|32 pages

Crude

The Bakken Fossil Fuel Frontier

chapter 4|34 pages

Clay

Spies in the Making: Imperial Oil Economies and the Geographies of Mediterranean Food

chapter 5|40 pages

Sand

825 Miles: or, How to Make a Beach

chapter 6|28 pages

Mud

And its Meaning in a Port Town

chapter 7|44 pages

Metabolite

Material as Physical History of a Relationship

chapter |27 pages

Conclusion