Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Having an anthropocene body hydrocarbons, biofu...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Having an anthropocene body hydrocarbons, biofuels and metabolism

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Having an anthropocene body hydrocarbons, biofuels and metabolism. / Mackenzie, Adrian.
In: Body and Society, Vol. 20, No. 1, 03.2014, p. 3-30.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Mackenzie A. Having an anthropocene body hydrocarbons, biofuels and metabolism. Body and Society. 2014 Mar;20(1):3-30. Epub 2013 Oct 9. doi: 10.1177/1357034X13506470

Author

Mackenzie, Adrian. / Having an anthropocene body hydrocarbons, biofuels and metabolism. In: Body and Society. 2014 ; Vol. 20, No. 1. pp. 3-30.

Bibtex

@article{60959da6821e4be2a2c1126d370d3805,
title = "Having an anthropocene body hydrocarbons, biofuels and metabolism",
abstract = "What does it mean to have an Anthropocene body? The Anthropocene period is putatively defined by flows of hydrocarbons and hydrocarbon derivatives (fuels, plastics, fertilizers, etc.), and the very term {\textquoteleft}Anthropocene{\textquoteright} suggests an increasing awareness of the finitude and contingency of contemporary corporealities. This article explores the idea of modelling an Anthropocene body as a living/non-living metabolic process. While identifying bodies with molecules raises a host of problems, metabolism and hydrocarbon biomolecules display a gamut of forms of possession and ways of having a body. Conversion between living and non-living forms of possession can be traced in contemporary genomic science and particularly in synthetic biology as they engineer microbes to produce next-generation biofuels. In contrast to fossil fuels, these fuels derive from genomically re-engineered microbes that digest biomass or photosynthesize to produce hydrocarbons. The problematic contemporary production of these fuels might help us to articulate what it means to have a body as a metabolic manifold of living and non-living forms of possession.",
keywords = "Anthropocene, body, fuel, infrastructure",
author = "Adrian Mackenzie",
year = "2014",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1177/1357034X13506470",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "3--30",
journal = "Body and Society",
issn = "1357-034X",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Having an anthropocene body hydrocarbons, biofuels and metabolism

AU - Mackenzie, Adrian

PY - 2014/3

Y1 - 2014/3

N2 - What does it mean to have an Anthropocene body? The Anthropocene period is putatively defined by flows of hydrocarbons and hydrocarbon derivatives (fuels, plastics, fertilizers, etc.), and the very term ‘Anthropocene’ suggests an increasing awareness of the finitude and contingency of contemporary corporealities. This article explores the idea of modelling an Anthropocene body as a living/non-living metabolic process. While identifying bodies with molecules raises a host of problems, metabolism and hydrocarbon biomolecules display a gamut of forms of possession and ways of having a body. Conversion between living and non-living forms of possession can be traced in contemporary genomic science and particularly in synthetic biology as they engineer microbes to produce next-generation biofuels. In contrast to fossil fuels, these fuels derive from genomically re-engineered microbes that digest biomass or photosynthesize to produce hydrocarbons. The problematic contemporary production of these fuels might help us to articulate what it means to have a body as a metabolic manifold of living and non-living forms of possession.

AB - What does it mean to have an Anthropocene body? The Anthropocene period is putatively defined by flows of hydrocarbons and hydrocarbon derivatives (fuels, plastics, fertilizers, etc.), and the very term ‘Anthropocene’ suggests an increasing awareness of the finitude and contingency of contemporary corporealities. This article explores the idea of modelling an Anthropocene body as a living/non-living metabolic process. While identifying bodies with molecules raises a host of problems, metabolism and hydrocarbon biomolecules display a gamut of forms of possession and ways of having a body. Conversion between living and non-living forms of possession can be traced in contemporary genomic science and particularly in synthetic biology as they engineer microbes to produce next-generation biofuels. In contrast to fossil fuels, these fuels derive from genomically re-engineered microbes that digest biomass or photosynthesize to produce hydrocarbons. The problematic contemporary production of these fuels might help us to articulate what it means to have a body as a metabolic manifold of living and non-living forms of possession.

KW - Anthropocene

KW - body

KW - fuel

KW - infrastructure

U2 - 10.1177/1357034X13506470

DO - 10.1177/1357034X13506470

M3 - Journal article

VL - 20

SP - 3

EP - 30

JO - Body and Society

JF - Body and Society

SN - 1357-034X

IS - 1

ER -