Admission requirements
This course is part of Sustainability, Climate Change and Food and therefore only accessible to students enrolled in that Minor.
Description
Waste is a part of our daily existence; but it is often invisibilized especially in cities. Compost bins, municipal waste collection system ferrate away waste. The ‘out of sight, out of mind’ mentality causes people to disconnect from where people’s waste goes. In this course, all types of waste, especially food, will become visible to explore our relationship with waste. This course will consist of dynamic interdisciplinary seminars drawing upon areas such as art, design, history, economics, sociology, sustainability (waste management) science, health, and politics to understand how we shape waste, but also how waste shapes us. We will be working with and hearing from several partners from municipal waste management systems and civil society organizations. Engagement between theory and practice is a critical component of this course hence the core of the course will focus on project/challenge based learning.
After exploring theories of waste and value, the course examines a broad selection of historic and contemporary geographies of waste with a focus on The Hague. Specific topics will include: the role of discourses and practices of waste in patterns of injustice and segregation; concepts of pollution governing debates on sustainability and the urban environment; formal and informal labours of garbage management and questions of stigma and rights to the city; global waste circulations and capitalist globalization; the transformation of value and meaning involved in diverse processes of recycling; waste-based social movements and rebellion through disorder; the art of rubbish; and the design, functioning, and environmental implications of technical systems such as sewage infrastructure, landfills, and waste processing facilities.
Course Objectives
To critically reflect upon the creation and destruction of value through examining discourses, practices, and infrastructures of waste.
To better understand questions of sustainability, urban ecological design, and people’s relationship to nature in the city by unpacking both cultural narratives and the technical systems—such as sewage, landfills, and waste processing facilities—that manage urban waste.
To consider the role of stigmatized labour in constructing and upholding gender, race, and class difference, including within the operation and maintenance of waste infrastructure.
To examine our own practices of consumption and waste through the lens of The Hague’s specific waste geographies and systems, including its technical and environmental management strategies.
To explore a set of social movements and artistic practices derived from the creative power of waste, while also engaging with the engineering and policy dimensions of waste system design.
Timetable
TBA; information will be published before May 2025.
Mode of instruction
In addition to lectures, course instruction will including watching of films, guest speakers, and workshops by KABK lectures.
Assessment Method
20% Daily Waste Journey (Week 1)
40% Group Project (Week 7)
40% Final Exam (Week 8)
Reading list
The links for the relevant readings for this course will be provided indicated in the syllabus. All readings will be available via the Leiden library.
Registration
Registration starts early May. Additional information TBA.
Contact
Dr. Jyothi Thrivikraman, j.k.thrivikraman@luc.leidenuniv.nl
Dr. Minjung Cho, m.j.cho@luc.leidenuniv.nl
Remarks
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