Faculté / Département ⤶ |
Répertoire par Unités | Répertoire par Projets | Répertoire des Chercheurs |
Répertoire par Collaborations | Classement par Domaines | Classement par Frascati | Disciplines CREF |
Unité : REPI Recherche et Études en Politique Internationale | ULB704
Materiality is back. After the turn to discourse in the late twentieth century, there is a new fascination with the material stuff of life. Matter matters after all in the study of contemporary socio-political life. As part of this renewed emphasis upon materiality, infrastructures are making a conspicuous appearance and so is electricity –an infrastructure par excellence that defines the modern condition. Situated at the intersection of urban studies, political economy, settler colonialism and Middle East studies, this project sets out to investigate this material surge through an in-depth study of the ways electrification comes to matter socially, politically, economically and spatially in Palestine/Israel. The project will study in archival and ethnographic detail practices, discourses and actors that transform electricity into nodes of governance and flows of power and thereby endow infrastructures with politically potent lives that vitalize, inform and shape processes of colonialism, modernity, statecraft and development in this particular context. In doing so, the project seeks to develop a conceptualization of electricity that unsettles existing boundaries between technology and society, the material and the symbolic and the human and non-human; address the actual theoretical and empirical lacunae in social science research on electricity and electrification in colonial contexts; and produce an innovative history of the region. The approach advanced in this project underscores, on the one hand, the specific historical and political significance of electricity in maintaining and challenging social orders. And, on the other, it provides an alternative to accounts of Palestine-Israel largely defined by geopolitics and violence, offering instead a lens that allows for careful consideration of what might be learned from a reading of the seemingly mundane ‘things’ that still today connect (albeit selectively) spaces and populations otherwise increasingly divided.
Site web: https://repi.centresphisoc.ulb.be/fr/user/1475
• F.R.S.-FNRS et Fonds associés (hors FRIA)