Micro-Landscapes of the Anthropocene

Thing Theory

Jane Bennett is most well-known for her book ‘Vibrant Matter: A political ecology of things’, where she argues that everything, literally all matter has its own set of trajectories, potentialities and tendencies. She writes, “We are much better at admitting that humans infect nature than we are at admitting that nonhumanity infects culture, for the latter entails the blasphemous idea that nonhumans—trash, bacteria, stem cells, food, metal, technologies, weather—are actants more than objects.” Furthermore, the contact zone or relationship between humans and thing is what Bennett refers to as a “vital materialism”, which is referring to the active participation all nonhuman forces have in our world, it’s not just people making an impact on the environment, the environment also hits back. 

Resource: 
Artistry and Agency in the World of Vibrant Matter

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